Adaptive plasticity to the standard chemotherapeutic temozolomide (TMZ) leads to glioblastoma progression. Here, we examine early stages of this process in patient-derived cellular models, exposing the human lysine-specific demethylase 5B (KDM5B) as a prospective indicator for subclonal expansion. By integration of a reporter, we show its preferential activity in rare, stem-like ALDH1A1+ cells, immediately increasing expression upon TMZ exposure. Naive, genetically unmodified KDM5B cells phosphorylate AKT (pAKT) and act as slow-cycling persisters under TMZ. Knockdown of reverses pAKT levels, simultaneously increasing PTEN expression and TMZ sensitivity. Pharmacological inhibition of PTEN rescues the effect. Interference with subsequent to TMZ decreases cellular vitality, and clonal tracing with DNA barcoding demonstrates high individual levels of KDM5B to predict subclonal expansion already before TMZ exposure. Thus, KDM5B treatment-naive cells preferentially contribute to the dynamics of drug resistance under TMZ. These findings may serve as a cornerstone for future biomarker-assisted clinical trials.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10762356 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.isci.2023.108596 | DOI Listing |
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