Daily glucocorticoids promote glioblastoma growth and circadian synchrony to the host

Author:

Gonzalez-Aponte Maria F.ORCID,Damato Anna R.ORCID,Simon TatianaORCID,Aripova NiginaORCID,Darby FabrizioORCID,Rubin Joshua B.ORCID,Herzog Erik D.ORCID

Abstract

SummaryGlioblastoma (GBM) is the most common primary brain tumor in adults with a poor prognosis despite aggressive therapy. A recent, retrospective clinical study found that administering Temozolomide in the morning increased patient overall survival by 6 months compared to evening. Here, we tested the hypothesis that daily host signaling regulates tumor growth and synchronizes circadian rhythms in GBM. We found daily Dexamethasone promoted or suppressed GBM growth depending on time of day of administration and on the clock gene,Bmal1. Blocking circadian signals, like VIP or glucocorticoids, dramatically slowed GBM growth and disease progression. Finally, mouse and human GBM models have intrinsic circadian rhythms in clock gene expressionin vitroandin vivothat entrain to the host through glucocorticoid signaling, regardless of tumor type or host immune status. We conclude that GBM entrains to the circadian circuit of the brain, which modulates its growth through clock-controlled cues, like glucocorticoids.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference100 articles.

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