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Characterization of brain tumor initiating cells isolated from an animal model of CNS primitive neuroectodermal tumors.

Authors :
Malchenko S
Sredni ST
Boyineni J
Bi Y
Margaryan NV
Guda MR
Kostenko Y
Tomita T
Davuluri RV
Velpula K
Hendrix MJC
Soares MB
Source :
Oncotarget [Oncotarget] 2018 Feb 09; Vol. 9 (17), pp. 13733-13747. Date of Electronic Publication: 2018 Feb 09 (Print Publication: 2018).
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

CNS Primitive Neuroectodermal tumors (CNS-PNETs) are members of the embryonal family of malignant childhood brain tumors, which remain refractory to current therapeutic treatments. Current paradigm of brain tumorigenesis implicates brain tumor-initiating cells (BTIC) in the onset of tumorigenesis and tumor maintenance. However, despite their significance, there is currently no comprehensive characterization of CNS-PNETs BTICs. Recently, we described an animal model of CNS-PNET generated by orthotopic transplantation of human Radial Glial (RG) cells - the progenitor cells for adult neural stem cells (NSC) - into NOD-SCID mice brain and proposed that BTICs may play a role in the maintenance of these tumors. Here we report the characterization of BTIC lines derived from this CNS-PNET animal model. BTIC's orthotopic transplantation generated highly aggressive tumors also characterized as CNS-PNETs. The BTICs have the hallmarks of NSCs as they demonstrate self-renewing capacity and have the ability to differentiate into astrocytes and early migrating neurons. Moreover, the cells demonstrate aberrant accumulation of wild type tumor-suppressor protein p53, indicating its functional inactivation, highly up-regulated levels of onco-protein cMYC and the BTIC marker OCT3/4, along with metabolic switch to glycolysis - suggesting that these changes occurred in the early stages of tumorigenesis. Furthermore, based on RNA- and DNA-seq data, the BTICs did not acquire any transcriptome-changing genomic alterations indicating that the onset of tumorigenesis may be epigenetically driven. The study of these BTIC self-renewing cells in our model may enable uncovering the molecular alterations that are responsible for the onset and maintenance of the malignant PNET phenotype.<br />Competing Interests: CONFLICTS OF INTEREST The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1949-2553
Volume :
9
Issue :
17
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Oncotarget
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
29568390
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.24460