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Aberrant mesenchymal differentiation of glioma stem-like cells: implications for therapeutic targeting
Balasubramaniyan, Veerakumar; Vaillant, Brian; Wang, Shuzhen; Gumin, Joy; Butalid, M Elena; Sai, Ke; Mukheef, Farah; Kim, Se Hoon; Boddeke, H W G M; Lang, Frederick; Aldape, Kenneth; Sulman, Erik P; Bhat, Krishna P; Colman, Howard
Differentiation has been proposed as a therapeutic strategy for glioblastoma (GBM) in part due to observations of stem-like cells in GBM that have been shown to undergo terminal differentiation in response to growth factor withdrawal and BMP activation. However, the effects of long term exposure to serum culture conditions on glioma sphere cultures/glioma stem-like cells (GSCs) have not been examined. Here we show that GSCs retained both neurosphere formation and tumor initiation abilities after short or long term serum exposure. Under these conditions, GSCs expressed both neural lineage and stem cell markers, highlighting the aberrant pseudo-differentiation state. GSCs maintained under adherent serum cultured conditions continued to proliferate and initiate tumor formation with efficiencies similar to GSCs maintained under proliferating (neurosphere) conditions. Proneural (PN) GSCs under serum exposure showed an induction of mesenchymal (MES) gene expression signatures. Our data indicate that exposure to serum containing media result in aberrant differentiation (e.g. toward MES lineage) and activation of alternative oncogenic pathways in GSCs.
PMCID:4741584
PMID: 26307681
ISSN: 1949-2553
CID: 3047932
Antiepileptic drug use improves overall survival in breast cancer patients with brain metastases in the setting of whole brain radiotherapy
Reddy, Jay P; Dawood, Shaheenah; Mitchell, Melissa; Debeb, Bisrat G; Bloom, Elizabeth; Gonzalez-Angulo, Ana M; Sulman, Erik P; Buchholz, Thomas A; Woodward, Wendy A
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE/OBJECTIVE:There is mounting evidence that histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors, e.g. valproic acid (VPA), synergize with radiation to improve outcomes in several cancers. This study was conducted to ascertain whether VPA affected outcomes in breast cancer patients with brain metastases treated with whole brain radiotherapy (WBRT). MATERIALS AND METHODS/METHODS:Records from 253 breast cancer patients with brain metastases treated with WBRT were reviewed. Data regarding use of all antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) were extracted. Kaplan-Meier survival times were calculated using the date of brain involvement as time zero. Cox proportional hazard models were used to determine the association between patient and tumor characteristics and overall survival (OS). RESULTS:Median OS for the entire patient cohort was 6 months. Patients receiving VPA (n=20) had a median OS of 11 months versus 5 months for those not receiving VPA (p=0.028). Median OS was 9 months for patients taking any AED (n=101) versus 4 months for those not taking AEDs (p=0.0003). On multivariate analysis both VPA and AED use were associated with improved OS (HR 0.61, p=0.0419; HR 0.59, p=0.0002, respectively). CONCLUSIONS:This study suggests the use of AEDs, including VPA, is associated with improved OS in breast cancer patients with brain metastases following WBRT.
PMID: 26482599
ISSN: 1879-0887
CID: 3047942
EZH2 protects glioma stem cells from radiation-induced cell death in a MELK/FOXM1-dependent manner
Kim, Sung-Hak; Joshi, Kaushal; Ezhilarasan, Ravesanker; Myers, Toshia R; Siu, Jason; Gu, Chunyu; Nakano-Okuno, Mariko; Taylor, David; Minata, Mutsuko; Sulman, Erik P; Lee, Jeongwu; Bhat, Krishna P L; Salcini, Anna Elisabetta; Nakano, Ichiro
Glioblastoma (GBM)-derived tumorigenic stem-like cells (GSCs) may play a key role in therapy resistance. Previously, we reported that the mitotic kinase MELK binds and phosphorylates the oncogenic transcription factor FOXM1 in GSCs. Here, we demonstrate that the catalytic subunit of Polycomb repressive complex 2, EZH2, is targeted by the MELK-FOXM1 complex, which in turn promotes resistance to radiation in GSCs. Clinically, EZH2 and MELK are coexpressed in GBM and significantly induced in postirradiation recurrent tumors whose expression is inversely correlated with patient prognosis. Through a gain-and loss-of-function study, we show that MELK or FOXM1 contributes to GSC radioresistance by regulation of EZH2. We further demonstrate that the MELK-EZH2 axis is evolutionarily conserved in Caenorhabditis elegans. Collectively, these data suggest that the MELK-FOXM1-EZH2 signaling axis is essential for GSC radioresistance and therefore raise the possibility that MELK-FOXM1-driven EZH2 signaling can serve as a therapeutic target in irradiation-resistant GBM tumors.
PMCID:4325196
PMID: 25601206
ISSN: 2213-6711
CID: 3047882
Systematic identification of single amino acid variants in glioma stem-cell-derived chromosome 19 proteins
Lichti, Cheryl F; Mostovenko, Ekaterina; Wadsworth, Paul A; Lynch, Gillian C; Pettitt, B Montgomery; Sulman, Erik P; Wang, Qianghu; Lang, Frederick F; Rezeli, Melinda; Marko-Varga, György; Végvári, Ãkos; Nilsson, Carol L
Novel proteoforms with single amino acid variations represent proteins that often have altered biological functions but are less explored in the human proteome. We have developed an approach, searching high quality shotgun proteomic data against an extended protein database, to identify expressed mutant proteoforms in glioma stem cell (GSC) lines. The systematic search of MS/MS spectra using PEAKS 7.0 as the search engine has recognized 17 chromosome 19 proteins in GSCs with altered amino acid sequences. The results were further verified by manual spectral examination, validating 19 proteoforms. One of the novel findings, a mutant form of branched-chain aminotransferase 2 (p.Thr186Arg), was verified at the transcript level and by targeted proteomics in several glioma stem cell lines. The structure of this proteoform was examined by molecular modeling in order to estimate conformational changes due to mutation that might lead to functional modifications potentially linked to glioma. Based on our initial findings, we believe that our approach presented could contribute to construct a more complete map of the human functional proteome.
PMCID:4324435
PMID: 25399873
ISSN: 1535-3907
CID: 3047872
Mitotic Index is an Independent Predictor of Recurrence-Free Survival in Meningioma
Olar, Adriana; Wani, Khalida M; Sulman, Erik P; Mansouri, Alireza; Zadeh, Gelareh; Wilson, Charmaine D; DeMonte, Franco; Fuller, Gregory N; Aldape, Kenneth D
While World Health Organization (WHO) grading of meningioma stratifies patients according to recurrence risk overall, there is substantial within-grade heterogeneity with respect to recurrence-free survival (RFS). Most meningiomas are graded according to mitotic counts per unit area on hematoxylin and eosin sections, a method potentially confounded by tumor cellularity, as well as potential limitations of accurate mitotic figure detection on routine histology. To refine mitotic figure assessment, we evaluated 363 meningiomas with phospho-histone H3 (Ser10) and determined the mitotic index (number of mitoses per 1000 tumor cells). The median mitotic indices among WHO grade I (n = 268), grade II (n = 84) and grade III (n = 11) tumors were 1, 4 and 12. Classification and regression tree analysis to categorize cut-offs identified three subgroups defined by mitotic indices of 0-2, 3-4 and ≥5, which on univariate analysis were associated with RFS (P < 0.01). In multivariate analysis, mitotic index subgrouped in this manner was significantly associated with RFS (P < 0.01) after adjustment for Simpson grade, WHO grade and MIB-1 index. Mitotic index was then examined within individual WHO grade, showing that for grade I and grade II meningiomas, mitotic index can add additional information to RFS risk. The results suggest that the use of a robust mitotic marker in meningioma could refine risk stratification.
PMCID:4297750
PMID: 25040885
ISSN: 1750-3639
CID: 3047862
Two mature products of MIR-491 coordinate to suppress key cancer hallmarks in glioblastoma
Li, Xia; Liu, Yuexin; Granberg, Kirsi J; Wang, Qinhao; Moore, Lynette M; Ji, Ping; Gumin, Joy; Sulman, Erik P; Calin, George A; Haapasalo, Hannu; Nykter, Matti; Shmulevich, Ilya; Fuller, Gregory N; Lang, Frederick F; Zhang, Wei
MIR-491 is commonly co-deleted with its adjacent CDKN2A on chromosome 9p21.3 in glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). However, it is not known whether deletion of MIR-491 is only a passenger event or has an important role. Small-RNA sequencing of samples from GBM patients demonstrated that both mature products of MIR-491 (miR-491-5p and -3p) are downregulated in tumors compared with the normal brain. The integration of GBM data from The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), miRNA target prediction and reporter assays showed that miR-491-5p directly targets EGFR, CDK6 and Bcl-xL, whereas miR-491-3p targets IGFBP2 and CDK6. Functionally, miR-491-3p inhibited glioma cell invasion; overexpression of both miR-491-5p and -3p inhibited proliferation of glioma cell lines and impaired the propagation of glioma stem cells (GSCs), thereby prolonging survival of xenograft mice. Moreover, knockdown of miR-491-5p in primary Ink4a-Arf-null mouse glial progenitor cells exacerbated cell proliferation and invasion. Therefore, MIR-491 is a tumor suppressor gene that, by utilizing both mature forms, coordinately controls the key cancer hallmarks: proliferation, invasion and stem cell propagation.
PMCID:4205227
PMID: 24747968
ISSN: 1476-5594
CID: 3047842
Circulating myeloid precursor profile as potential marker to differentiate radiation changes from tumor recurrence after brain stereotactic radiosurgery [Meeting Abstract]
Jiang, Wen; Rodriguez, Yvo; Boehling, Nicolas S.; Prabhu, Sujit S.; Kim, Betty Y. S.; Hwu, Patrick; Sulman, Erik P.; Brown, Paul D.; Li, Jing
ISI:000371578500507
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 3048632
ABL1 is required for Tie2-mediated DNA repair in brain tumor stem cells [Meeting Abstract]
Hossain, Mohammad B.; Shifat, Rehnuma; Johnson, David G.; Bedford, Mark T.; Hung, Mien-Chie; Cortes-Santiago, Nahir; Gabrusiewicz, Konrad; Gumin, Joy; Ezhilarasan, Ravesanker; Sulman, Erik P.; Lang, Frederick; Sawaya, Raymond; Yung, W. K. Alfred; Fueyo, Juan; Gomez-Manzano, Candelaria
ISI:000371597101327
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 3048342
Synergistic combination therapy with molecular targeted drugs in glioma stem-like cells [Meeting Abstract]
Shingu, Takashi; Holmes, Lindsay; Henry, Verlene; Letha, Khatri; Gururaj, Anupama E.; Gibson, Laura A.; Doucette, Tiffany; Lang, Frederick F.; Rao, Ganesh; Yuan, Liang; Sulman, Erik P.; Farrell, Nicholas P.; Priebe, Waldemar; Hess, Kenneth R.; Wang, Yaoqi A.; Hu, Jian; Bogler, Oliver
ISI:000371597102024
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 3048352
Synergistic antitumor effects of polo like kinase inhibitor volasertib in combination with ionizing radiation in glioblastoma [Meeting Abstract]
Dong, Jianwen; Nghi Nguyen; Ezhilarasan, Ravesanker; Wu, Shaofang; Piao, Yuji; Park, Soon Young; Tiao, Ningyi; Stephan, Clifford; Sulman, Erik P.; de Groot, John F.
ISI:000371578501150
ISSN: 0008-5472
CID: 3048642