Meclofenamate causes loss of cellular tethering and decoupling of functional networks in glioblastoma

Matthias Schneider(University Hospital Bonn), Lea Vollmer(University of Freiburg), Anna‐Laura Potthoff(University Hospital Bonn), Vidhya M. Ravi(University of Freiburg), Bernd O. Evert(University Hospital Bonn), Mohummad Aminur Rahman(University of Bergen), Shahin Sarowar(University of Bergen), Jan Kueckelhaus(University of Freiburg), Paulina Will(University of Freiburg), David Zurhorst(University Hospital Bonn), Kevin Joseph(University of Freiburg), Julian P. Maier(University of Freiburg), Nicolas Neidert(University of Freiburg), Paolo d’Errico(University of Freiburg), Melanie Meyer‐Luehmann(University of Freiburg), Ulrich Hofmann(University of Freiburg), Andreas Dolf(University Hospital Bonn), Paolo Salomoni(German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases), Erdem Güresir(University Hospital Bonn), Per Øyvind Enger(University of Bergen), Martha Chekenya(University of Bergen), Torsten Pietsch(University Hospital Bonn), Patrick Schuss(University Hospital Bonn), Oliver Schnell(University of Freiburg), Mike‐Andrew Westhoff(University Hospital Ulm), Jürgen Beck(University of Freiburg), Hartmut Vatter(University Hospital Bonn), Andreas Waha(University Hospital Bonn), Ulrich Herrlinger(University Hospital Bonn), Dieter Henrik Heiland(University of Freiburg)
Neuro-Oncology
April 14, 2021
Cited by 58Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Glioblastoma cells assemble to a syncytial communicating network based on tumor microtubes (TMs) as ultra-long membrane protrusions. The relationship between network architecture and transcriptional profile remains poorly investigated. Drugs that interfere with this syncytial connectivity such as meclofenamate (MFA) may be highly attractive for glioblastoma therapy. METHODS: In a human neocortical slice model using glioblastoma cell populations of different transcriptional signatures, three-dimensional tumor networks were reconstructed, and TM-based intercellular connectivity was mapped on the basis of two-photon imaging data. MFA was used to modulate morphological and functional connectivity; downstream effects of MFA treatment were investigated by RNA sequencing and fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS) analysis. RESULTS: TM-based network morphology strongly differed between the transcriptional cellular subtypes of glioblastoma and was dependent on axon guidance molecule expression. MFA revealed both a functional and morphological demolishment of glioblastoma network architectures which was reflected by a reduction of TM-mediated intercellular cytosolic traffic as well as a breakdown of TM length. RNA sequencing confirmed a downregulation of NCAM and axon guidance molecule signaling upon MFA treatment. Loss of glioblastoma communicating networks was accompanied by a failure in the upregulation of genes that are required for DNA repair in response to temozolomide (TMZ) treatment and culminated in profound treatment response to TMZ-mediated toxicity. CONCLUSION: The capacity of TM formation reflects transcriptional cellular heterogeneity. MFA effectively demolishes functional and morphological TM-based syncytial network architectures. These findings might pave the way to a clinical implementation of MFA as a TM-targeted therapeutic approach.


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