Glioblastoma stem cells (GSCs) function as dynamic regulators of tumor persistence, maintained by interconnected genetic, epigenetic, metabolic, and microenvironment-derived circuits. Rather than fixed entities, GSCs continuously recalibrate their functional state as transcriptional regulators, chromatin architecture, and non-coding RNA networks shift in response to microenvironmental cues. Hypoxic, vascular, and immune niches reinforce these adaptive states by stabilizing HIF signaling, modulating cytokine gradients, and sustaining immunosuppression. Metabolic flexibility further supports survival under therapeutic and environmental stress. Standard therapies inadvertently activate these same resilience pathways: TMZ enhances DNA repair and quiescent survival, while radiation promotes mesenchymal transition and immune evasion, thereby enriching GSC-associated circuits that drive recurrence. Understanding how these molecular circuits converge to sustain stemness, plasticity, and microenvironmental crosstalk highlights the need for combinatorial strategies that simultaneously disrupt epigenetic gating, metabolic rewiring, ncRNA-controlled repair, and niche-dependent signaling to achieve durable glioblastoma control.
Singh et al. (Sat,) studied this question.