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Lineage-specific splicing of a brain-enriched alternative exon promotes glioblastoma progression

Authors :
Ferrarese, Roberto
Harsh, IV, Griffith R.
Yadav, Ajay K.
Bug, Eva
Maticzka, Daniel
Reichardt, Wilfried
Dombrowski, Stephen M.
Miller, Tyler E.
Masilamani, Anie P.
Dai, Fangping
Kim, Hyunsoo
Hadler, Michael
Scholtens, Denise M.
Yu, Irene L.Y.
Beck, Jurgen
Srinivasasainagendra, Vinodh
Costa, Fabrizio
Baxan, Nicoleta
Pfeifer, Dietmar
von Elverfeldt, Dominik
Backofen, Rolf
Weyerbrock, Astrid
Duarte, Christine W.
He, Xiaolin
Prinz, Marco
Chandler, James P.
Vogel, Hannes
Chakravarti, Arnab
Rich, Jeremy N.
Carro, Maria S.
Bredel, Markus
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. July 1, 2014, Vol. 124 Issue 7, p2861, 16 p.
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

Tissue-specific alternative splicing is critical for the emergence of tissue identity during development, yet the role of this process in malignant transformation is undefined. Tissue-specific splicing involves evolutionarily conserved, alternative exons that represent only a minority of the total alternative exons identified. Many of these conserved exons have functional features that influence signaling pathways to profound biological effect. Here, we determined that lineage-specific splicing of a brain-enriched cassette exon in the membrane-binding tumor suppressor annexin A7 (ANXA7) diminishes endosomal targeting of the EGFR oncoprotein, consequently enhancing EGFR signaling during brain tumor progression. ANXA7 exon splicing was mediated by the ribonucleoprotein PTBP1, which is normally repressed during neuronal development. PTBP1 was highly expressed in glioblastomas due to loss of a brain-enriched microRNA (miR-124) and to PTBP1 amplification. The alternative ANXA7 splicing trait was present in precursor cells, suggesting that glioblastoma cells inherit the trait from a potential tumor-initiating ancestor and that these cells exploit this trait through accumulation of mutations that enhance EGFR signaling. Our data illustrate that lineage- specific splicing of a tissue-regulated alternative exon in a constituent of an oncogenic pathway eliminates tumor suppressor functions and promotes glioblastoma progression. This paradigm may offer a general model as to how tissue-specific regulatory mechanisms can reprogram normal developmental processes into oncogenic ones.<br />Introduction Glioblastoma multiforme is a complex genomic disease in which multiple signaling pathways are disrupted by recurrent mutations (1-4). Almost all glioblastomas exhibit excessive activation of the EGFR pathway, often [...]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
124
Issue :
7
Database :
Gale General OneFile
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsgcl.376933947
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI68836