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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

Cuproptosis and Immune Checkpoints in Glioblastoma

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
November 6, 2025
in Cancer
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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In a groundbreaking study published in BMC Cancer, researchers have identified and validated a critical connection between immune checkpoint gene expression and a novel form of regulated cell death known as cuproptosis in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Glioblastoma, the most aggressive primary brain tumor, continues to defy conventional treatments, underscoring the urgent need for innovative therapeutic targets. This study sheds unprecedented light on how copper-induced cell death mechanisms interplay with immune checkpoint pathways—a revelation poised to impact the future landscape of glioma immunotherapy.

The investigation centered on four pivotal immune checkpoint genes—CD276, CD40, TNFSF14, and TNFSF9—and their role in glioblastoma progression, specifically within the context of cuproptosis. Utilizing transcriptional data acquired from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), the team employed LASSO Cox regression analysis to pinpoint these genes as key factors linked with copper-dependent cytotoxicity in GBM. Their findings not only deepen the molecular understanding of glioma biology but also highlight the prognostic significance of these genes, potentially guiding therapeutic stratifications.

Cuproptosis represents a recently characterized form of programmed cell death triggered by intracellular copper accumulation leading to toxic protein aggregation. The study delves into this intricacy by investigating the copper death-related protein FDX1, establishing its correlation with immune checkpoint expression. This approach innovatively links metabolic and immune regulatory pathways, reminding us that glioblastoma’s resistance mechanisms may not solely rely on the tumor’s microenvironment or genetic mutations but also on nuanced metal ion homeostasis.

Expression analyses revealed that CD276, CD40, and TNFSF14 were significantly upregulated in GBM tissues compared to adjacent normal brain tissues, indicating their potential roles as oncogenic drivers. Contrastingly, TNFSF9 showed marked downregulation. This differential expression pattern delineates a complex immune checkpoint milieu in the glioma microenvironment, which may influence tumor immune evasion and responsiveness to therapies that modulate the immune system.

The prognostic implications of these findings are profound. Patients exhibiting elevated levels of CD276, CD40, and TNFSF14 demonstrated significantly poorer survival outcomes. This indicates that these immune checkpoint molecules may contribute to an immunosuppressive tumor microenvironment that facilitates glioblastoma aggressiveness. Intriguingly, TNFSF9 expression correlated inversely with prognosis, suggesting a potentially protective or tumor-suppressive role.

To translate these molecular insights into functional consequences, the study performed gene knockdown and overexpression experiments on glioma cell lines A172 and U251. Silencing CD276, CD40, and TNFSF14 notably suppressed tumor cell viability, reinforcing their potential as therapeutic targets. Conversely, overexpression of TNFSF9 curtailed cell growth, further supporting its unique negative correlation with glioma progression and indicating that enhancing TNFSF9 activity may form part of future treatment modalities.

The study’s combination of large-scale bioinformatic analyses with rigorous in vitro validation underlines the robustness of the findings. Moreover, the integration of cuproptosis into the paradigm of tumor biology opens new avenues for drug development, especially considering that copper chelators or agents modulating copper homeostasis could synergize with immune checkpoint inhibitors—arguably changing the treatment landscape for patients plagued by GBM.

Notably, the research identifies FDX1 as a key regulator that links copper-induced cytotoxicity with immune checkpoint regulation. The biological functions of FDX1 in electron transfer and mitochondrial metabolism are well-known, but this study pioneers its association with tumor immunity and cuproptosis, offering a promising molecular target that merits further investigation in preclinical and clinical settings.

Glioblastoma’s notorious resistance to traditional therapies such as temozolomide and radiotherapy necessitates innovative approaches. This study’s insights suggest that targeting the intersection of metabolic remodeling and immune evasion via cuproptosis-related immune checkpoints could bypass conventional treatment roadblocks by rendering glioma cells more susceptible to immune-mediated destruction.

As immune checkpoint blockade therapies continue to revolutionize cancer treatment, understanding their interplay with cellular death pathways is critical. This research exemplifies how such comprehensive molecular dissection informs precision medicine, enabling clinicians to foresee which patients might benefit from novel combinatorial regimens that incorporate copper modulation and immune checkpoint inhibition.

Furthermore, the observed dichotomous roles of immune checkpoints in GBM reported here underscore the complexity inherent to immune regulation within tumors. While CD276, CD40, and TNFSF14 seem tumor-promoting, the paradoxical behavior of TNFSF9 urges caution in therapeutic targeting, highlighting the need for context-dependent strategies that consider the multifaceted nature of tumor immunobiology.

The authors conclude that cuproptosis-related immune checkpoint expression is not only a biomarker for glioma prognosis but also a mechanistic gateway towards designing targeted immunotherapies. This approach could eventually surmount glioblastoma’s immunosuppressive microenvironment, which has long impeded effective immune engagement and durable therapeutic responses.

In sum, this pioneering investigation establishes a novel mechanistic link between copper-induced cell death and immune checkpoint pathways in glioblastoma, setting the stage for innovative treatments that combine metal ion biology and immuno-oncology. As research continues, these findings may pave the way for personalized therapeutic regimens offering renewed hope to patients battling this devastating malignancy.

Subject of Research: Molecular mechanisms linking immune checkpoint expression to cuproptosis in glioblastoma multiforme.

Article Title: Identification and validation of cuproptosis-related immune checkpoint expression for glioblastoma.

Article References: Huang, J., Tong, S., Liu, J. et al. Identification and validation of cuproptosis-related immune checkpoint expression for glioblastoma. BMC Cancer 25, 1723 (2025). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-025-15195-5

Image Credits: Scienmag.com

DOI: 06 November 2025

Keywords: glioblastoma, cuproptosis, immune checkpoints, CD276, CD40, TNFSF14, TNFSF9, FDX1, copper-induced cell death, immunotherapy, tumor microenvironment, LASSO Cox regression, prognostic biomarkers

Tags: CD276 CD40 TNFSF14 TNFSF9 rolescopper-dependent cytotoxicitycopper-induced cell death mechanismscuproptosis in glioblastomaFDX1 protein and immune checkpointsglioblastoma multiforme researchglioma immunotherapy advancementsimmune checkpoint gene expressionLASSO Cox regression analysis in cancernovel therapeutic targets for GBMprognostic significance of glioma genestranscriptional data from TCGA

Tags: cuproptosis in glioblastoma immunotherapyFDX1 and copper-induced cytotoxicityimmune checkpoint gene expressionprognostic biomarkers in gliomaTCGA transcriptional analysis in GBM
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