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

Soniya Bastola(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Marat S. Pavlyukov(Institute of Bioorganic Chemistry), Daisuke Yamashita(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Sadashib Ghosh(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Heejin Cho(Samsung Medical Center), Noritaka Kagaya(National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology), Zhuo Zhang(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Mutsuko Minata(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Yeri Lee(Samsung Medical Center), Hirokazu Sadahiro(Yamaguchi University), Shinobu Yamaguchi(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Svetlana V. Komarova(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Eddy S. Yang(University of Alabama at Birmingham), James M. Markert(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Burt Nabors(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Krishna Bhat(The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center), James Lee(The Ohio State University), Qin Chen(University of Alabama at Birmingham), David K. Crossman(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Kazuo Shin‐ya(National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology), Do‐Hyun Nam(Samsung (South Korea)), Ichiro Nakano(University of Tsukuba)
Nature Communications
September 16, 2020
Cited by 166Open Access
Full Text

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.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis