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Mutant IDH1 regulates the tumor-associated immune system in gliomas

Authors :
Eric C. Holland
Mark L. Hanke
Daciana Margineantu
Jeff Delrow
Julia Kargl
A. McGarry Houghton
Nduka Amankulor
Sonali Arora
Aparna Rao
Frank Szulzewsky
David M. Hockenbery
Hamid Bolouri
Youngmi Kim
Source :
Genesdevelopment. 31(8)
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Gliomas harboring mutations in isocitrate dehydrogenase 1/2 (IDH1/2) have the CpG island methylator phenotype (CIMP) and significantly longer patient survival time than wild-type IDH1/2 (wtIDH1/2) tumors. Although there are many factors underlying the differences in survival between these two tumor types, immune-related differences in cell content are potentially important contributors. In order to investigate the role of IDH mutations in immune response, we created a syngeneic pair mouse model for mutant IDH1 (muIDH1) and wtIDH1 gliomas and demonstrated that muIDH1 mice showed many molecular and clinical similarities to muIDH1 human gliomas, including a 100-fold higher concentration of 2-hydroxygluratate (2-HG), longer survival time, and higher CpG methylation compared with wtIDH1. Also, we showed that IDH1 mutations caused down-regulation of leukocyte chemotaxis, resulting in repression of the tumor-associated immune system. Given that significant infiltration of immune cells such as macrophages, microglia, monocytes, and neutrophils is linked to poor prognosis in many cancer types, these reduced immune infiltrates in muIDH1 glioma tumors may contribute in part to the differences in aggressiveness of the two glioma types.

Details

ISSN :
15495477
Volume :
31
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Genesdevelopment
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....788c359af829a9a789bbe68f60ef90f0