Glycometabolic reprogramming-induced XRCC1 lactylation confers therapeutic resistance in ALDH1A3-overexpressing glioblastoma

Guanzhang Li(Capital Medical University), Di Wang(Capital Medical University), You Zhai(Capital Medical University), Changqing Pan(Capital Medical University), Jiazheng Zhang(Capital Medical University), Chen Wang(Capital Medical University), Ruoyu Huang(Capital Medical University), Mingchen Yu(Capital Medical University), Yiming Li(Capital Medical University), Xing Liu(Capital Medical University), Yanwei Liu(Capital Medical University), Fan Wu(Capital Medical University), Zheng Zhao(Capital Medical University), Huimin Hu(Capital Medical University), Zhongfang Shi(Capital Medical University), Ulf D. Kahlert(Capital Medical University), Tao Jiang(Capital Medical University), Wei Zhang(Capital Medical University)
Cell Metabolism
August 1, 2024
Cited by 173Open Access
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Abstract

Patients with high ALDH1A3-expressing glioblastoma (ALDH1A3hi GBM) show limited benefit from postoperative chemoradiotherapy. Understanding the mechanisms underlying such resistance in these patients is crucial for the development of new treatments. Here, we show that the interaction between ALDH1A3 and PKM2 enhances the latter’s tetramerization and promotes lactate accumulation in glioblastoma stem cells (GSCs). By scanning the lactylated proteome in lactate-accumulating GSCs, we show that XRCC1 undergoes lactylation at lysine 247 (K247). Lactylated XRCC1 shows a stronger affinity for importin α, allowing for greater nuclear transposition of XRCC1 and enhanced DNA repair. Through high-throughput screening of a small-molecule library, we show that D34-919 potently disrupts the ALDH1A3-PKM2 interaction, preventing the ALDH1A3-mediated enhancement of PKM2 tetramerization. In vitro and in vivo treatment with D34-919 enhanced chemoradiotherapy-induced apoptosis of GBM cells. Together, our findings show that ALDH1A3-mediated PKM2 tetramerization is a potential therapeutic target to improve the response to chemoradiotherapy in ALDH1A3hi GBM.


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