Mutant IDH1 Disrupts the Mouse Subventricular Zone and Alters Brain Tumor Progression

Christopher J. Pirozzi(Duke University), Austin B. Carpenter(Duke University), Matthew S. Waitkus(Duke University), Catherine Y. Wang(Duke University), Huishan Zhu(Duke University), Landon J. Hansen(Duke University), Lee H. Chen(Duke University), Paula K. Greer(Duke University), Jie Feng(Beijing Institute of Neurosurgery), Yu Wang(Beijing Tian Tan Hospital), Cheryl B. Bock(Duke Medical Center), Ping Fan(Duke Medical Center), Ivan Spasojević(Duke Medical Center), Roger E. McLendon(Duke University), Darell D. Bigner(Duke University), Yiping He(Duke University), Hai Yan(Duke University)
Molecular Cancer Research
February 1, 2017
Cited by 44Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract IDH1 mutations occur in the majority of low-grade gliomas and lead to the production of the oncometabolite, D-2-hydroxyglutarate (D-2HG). To understand the effects of tumor-associated mutant IDH1 (IDH1-R132H) on both the neural stem cell (NSC) population and brain tumorigenesis, genetically faithful cell lines and mouse model systems were generated. Here, it is reported that mouse NSCs expressing Idh1-R132H displayed reduced proliferation due to p53-mediated cell-cycle arrest as well as a decreased ability to undergo neuronal differentiation. In vivo, Idh1-R132H expression reduced proliferation of cells within the germinal zone of the subventricular zone (SVZ). The NSCs within this area were dispersed and disorganized in mutant animals, suggesting that Idh1-R132H perturbed the NSCs and the microenvironment from which gliomas arise. In addition, tumor-bearing animals expressing mutant Idh1 displayed a prolonged survival and also overexpressed Olig2, features consistent with IDH1-mutated human gliomas. These data indicate that mutant Idh1 disrupts the NSC microenvironment and the candidate cell-of-origin for glioma; thus, altering the progression of tumorigenesis. In addition, this study provides a mutant Idh1 brain tumor model that genetically recapitulates human disease, laying the foundation for future investigations on mutant IDH1-mediated brain tumorigenesis and targeted therapy. Implications: Through the use of a conditional mutant mouse model that confers a less aggressive tumor phenotype, this study reveals that mutant Idh1 impacts the candidate cell-of-origin for gliomas. Mol Cancer Res; 15(5); 507–20. ©2017 AACR.


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