A covalent creatine kinase inhibitor ablates glioblastoma migration and sensitizes tumors to oxidative stress

Joshua L. Katz(Northwestern University), Yuheng Geng(Northwestern University), Leah K. Billingham(Northwestern University), Nishanth S. Sadagopan(Northwestern University), Susan L DeLay(Northwestern University), Jay Subbiah(Northwestern University), Tzu-Yi Chia(Northwestern University), Graysen McManus(Northwestern University), Chao Wei(Northwestern University), Hanxiang Wang(Northwestern University), Hanchen Lin(Northwestern University), Caylee Silvers(Northwestern University), Lauren Boland(Northwestern University), Si Wang(Northwestern University), Hanxiao Wan(Northwestern University), David Hou(Northwestern University), Gustavo Ignacio Vázquez-Cervantes(Northwestern University), Tarlan Arjmandi(Northwestern University), Zainab H Shaikh(Northwestern University), Peng Zhang(Northwestern University), Atique U. Ahmed(Northwestern University), Deanna Tiek(Northwestern University), Catalina Lee-Chang(Northwestern University), Edward T. Chouchani(Harvard University), Jason Miska(Northwestern University)
Scientific Reports
September 20, 2024
Cited by 9Open Access
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Abstract

Glioblastoma is a Grade 4 primary brain tumor defined by therapy resistance, diffuse infiltration, and near-uniform lethality. The underlying mechanisms are unknown, and no treatment has been curative. Using a recently developed creatine kinase inhibitor (CKi), we explored the role of this inhibitor on GBM biology in vitro. While CKi minimally impacted GBM cell proliferation and viability, it significantly affected migration. In established GBM cell lines and patient-derived xenografts, CKi ablated both the migration and invasion of GBM cells. CKi also hindered radiation-induced migration. RNA-seq revealed a decrease in invasion-related genes, with an unexpected increase in glutathione metabolism and ferroptosis protection genes post-CKi treatment. The effects of CKi could be reversed by the addition of cell-permeable glutathione. Carbon-13 metabolite tracing indicated heightened glutathione biosynthesis post-CKi treatment. Combinatorial CKi blockade and glutathione inhibition or ferroptosis activation abrogated cell survival. Our data demonstrated that CKi perturbs promigratory and anti-ferroptotic roles in GBM, identifying the creatine kinase axis as a druggable target for GBM treatment.


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