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Glioma-initiating cells at tumor edge gain signals from tumor core cells to promote their malignancy

Authors :
Zhuo Zhang
Krishna P. Bhat
Soniya Bastola
Hirokazu Sadahiro
Louis B. Nabors
James M. Markert
Qin Chen
Ichiro Nakano
James L. Lee
Noritaka Kagaya
Marat S. Pavlyukov
Sadashib Ghosh
Kazuo Shin-ya
Svetlana Komarova
Daisuke Yamashita
David K. Crossman
Yeri Lee
Do-Hyun Nam
Eddy S. Yang
Hee Jin Cho
Mutsuko Minata
Shinobu Yamaguchi
Source :
Nature Communications, Nature Communications, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-17 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Intratumor spatial heterogeneity facilitates therapeutic resistance in glioblastoma (GBM). Nonetheless, understanding of GBM heterogeneity is largely limited to the surgically resectable tumor core lesion while the seeds for recurrence reside in the unresectable tumor edge. In this study, stratification of GBM to core and edge demonstrates clinically relevant surgical sequelae. We establish regionally derived models of GBM edge and core that retain their spatial identity in a cell autonomous manner. Upon xenotransplantation, edge-derived cells show a higher capacity for infiltrative growth, while core cells demonstrate core lesions with greater therapy resistance. Investigation of intercellular signaling between these two tumor populations uncovers the paracrine crosstalk from tumor core that promotes malignancy and therapy resistance of edge cells. These phenotypic alterations are initiated by HDAC1 in GBM core cells which subsequently affect edge cells by secreting the soluble form of CD109 protein. Our data reveal the role of intracellular communication between regionally different populations of GBM cells in tumor recurrence.<br />Intratumoural spatial heterogeneity is crucial to enhance therapeutic resistance in glioblastoma. Here, the authors show a paracrine signaling mechanism where glioblastoma-initiating cells located in the tumour edge elevate their malignancy by interaction with core-located tumour cells.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
11
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....94113267dfc78ed46baa96a653a91d29
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18189-y