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Active NON-SBIR/STTR RPGS NIH (US)

Targeting Glioblastoma Stem Cells

$9.54M USD

Funder NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE
Recipient Organization University of Pittsburgh At Pittsburgh
Country United States
Start Date Sep 01, 2024
End Date Aug 31, 2031
Duration 2,555 days
Number of Grantees 1
Roles Principal Investigator
Data Source NIH (US)
Grant ID 10982682
Grant Description

PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT Glioblastoma represents one of the most lethal types of cancers. Despite extensive molecular characterization, precision medicine efforts have largely failed for glioblastoma therapy, suggesting that these complex tumors are resilient ecosystems that overcome singular therapeutic approaches. Aging is strongly

associated with increased incidence and mortality of most cancers, including glioblastoma. However, the cellular and molecular mechanisms by which aging promotes tumor initiation and progression remain poorly understood. Tissue-specific stem cells contribute to development, renewal, and regeneration of most organs.

Neural stem cells (NSCs) undergo little to no cell division during normal homeostasis but become activated by tissue injury with wound responses. NSCs reside in specialized niches that provide maintenance cues and regulate the balance between quiescence and proliferation. Inflammation and nutrient constraints in NSC

niches in the aging brain promotes quiescence and decreased regenerative potential. Like the normal brain, glioblastomas contain cellular hierarchies with stem-like tumor cells at the apex. While controversial, these cancer stem cells contribute to therapeutic resistance, invasion into normal brain,

generation of new vasculature, and evasion of anti-tumor immunity. Cancer stem cells display remarkable plasticity, rendering therapeutic targeting strategies challenging. In the proposed studies, the Rich laboratory will leverage insights from aging in the nervous system and the molecular circuitry of cancer stem cells to

understand how aging promotes tumor growth through cell autonomous mechanisms and interactions with the microenvironment. We will leverage preliminary observations that cancer stem cells reprogram essential metabolic pathways through integration of extrinsic signals from tumor-infiltrating immune cells and

vasculature to promote epigenetic reprogramming, empowering sustained proliferation, self-renewal, and immune evasion. Based on this background, we hypothesize that aging promotes reprogramming of the tumor immune microenvironment and cell autonomous nuclear structural regulation that will inform the

development of novel brain tumor treatments. Using spatial transcriptomics and metabolomics of patient tumors and organoids, we will investigate the metabolic alterations within the aging tumor microenvironment to derive multi-modal therapies that disrupt the dynamic growth and survival mechanisms within tumors.

All Grantees

University of Pittsburgh At Pittsburgh

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