Cargando…

Prominin 1/CD133 Endothelium Sustains Growth of Proneural Glioma

In glioblastoma high expression of the CD133 gene, also called Prominin1, is associated with poor prognosis. The PDGF-driven proneural group represents a subset of glioblastoma in which CD133 is not overexpressed. Interestingly, this particular subset shows a relatively good prognosis. As with many...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Ding, Bi-Sen, James, Daylon, Iyer, Rajiv, Falciatori, Ilaria, Hambardzumyan, Dolores, Wang, Su, Butler, Jason M., Rabbany, Sina Y., Hormigo, Adília
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3636202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23637986
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0062150
_version_ 1782267290101743616
author Ding, Bi-Sen
James, Daylon
Iyer, Rajiv
Falciatori, Ilaria
Hambardzumyan, Dolores
Wang, Su
Butler, Jason M.
Rabbany, Sina Y.
Hormigo, Adília
author_facet Ding, Bi-Sen
James, Daylon
Iyer, Rajiv
Falciatori, Ilaria
Hambardzumyan, Dolores
Wang, Su
Butler, Jason M.
Rabbany, Sina Y.
Hormigo, Adília
author_sort Ding, Bi-Sen
collection PubMed
description In glioblastoma high expression of the CD133 gene, also called Prominin1, is associated with poor prognosis. The PDGF-driven proneural group represents a subset of glioblastoma in which CD133 is not overexpressed. Interestingly, this particular subset shows a relatively good prognosis. As with many other tumors, gliobastoma is believed to arise and be maintained by a restricted population of stem-like cancer cells that express the CD133 transmembrane protein. The significance of CD133(+) cells for gliomagenesis is controversial because of conflicting supporting evidence. Contributing to this inconsistency is the fact that the isolation of CD133(+) cells has largely relied on the use of antibodies against ill-defined glycosylated epitopes of CD133. To overcome this problem, we used a knock-in lacZ reporter mouse, Prom1(lacZ/+), to track Prom1(+) cells in the brain. We found that Prom1 (prominin1, murine CD133 homologue) is expressed by cells that express markers characteristic of the neuronal, glial or vascular lineages. In proneural tumors derived from injection of RCAS-PDGF into the brains of tv-a;Ink4a-Arf(−/−) Prom1(lacZ/+) mice, Prom1(+) cells expressed markers for astrocytes or endothelial cells. Mice co-transplanted with proneural tumor sphere cells and Prom1(+) endothelium had a significantly increased tumor burden and more vascular proliferation (angiogenesis) than those co-transplanted with Prom1(−) endothelium. We also identified specific genes in Prom1(+) endothelium that code for endothelial signaling modulators that were not overexpressed in Prom1(−) endothelium. These factors may support proneural tumor progression and could be potential targets for anti-angiogenic therapy.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3636202
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-36362022013-05-01 Prominin 1/CD133 Endothelium Sustains Growth of Proneural Glioma Ding, Bi-Sen James, Daylon Iyer, Rajiv Falciatori, Ilaria Hambardzumyan, Dolores Wang, Su Butler, Jason M. Rabbany, Sina Y. Hormigo, Adília PLoS One Research Article In glioblastoma high expression of the CD133 gene, also called Prominin1, is associated with poor prognosis. The PDGF-driven proneural group represents a subset of glioblastoma in which CD133 is not overexpressed. Interestingly, this particular subset shows a relatively good prognosis. As with many other tumors, gliobastoma is believed to arise and be maintained by a restricted population of stem-like cancer cells that express the CD133 transmembrane protein. The significance of CD133(+) cells for gliomagenesis is controversial because of conflicting supporting evidence. Contributing to this inconsistency is the fact that the isolation of CD133(+) cells has largely relied on the use of antibodies against ill-defined glycosylated epitopes of CD133. To overcome this problem, we used a knock-in lacZ reporter mouse, Prom1(lacZ/+), to track Prom1(+) cells in the brain. We found that Prom1 (prominin1, murine CD133 homologue) is expressed by cells that express markers characteristic of the neuronal, glial or vascular lineages. In proneural tumors derived from injection of RCAS-PDGF into the brains of tv-a;Ink4a-Arf(−/−) Prom1(lacZ/+) mice, Prom1(+) cells expressed markers for astrocytes or endothelial cells. Mice co-transplanted with proneural tumor sphere cells and Prom1(+) endothelium had a significantly increased tumor burden and more vascular proliferation (angiogenesis) than those co-transplanted with Prom1(−) endothelium. We also identified specific genes in Prom1(+) endothelium that code for endothelial signaling modulators that were not overexpressed in Prom1(−) endothelium. These factors may support proneural tumor progression and could be potential targets for anti-angiogenic therapy. Public Library of Science 2013-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC3636202/ /pubmed/23637986 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0062150 Text en © 2013 Ding et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ding, Bi-Sen
James, Daylon
Iyer, Rajiv
Falciatori, Ilaria
Hambardzumyan, Dolores
Wang, Su
Butler, Jason M.
Rabbany, Sina Y.
Hormigo, Adília
Prominin 1/CD133 Endothelium Sustains Growth of Proneural Glioma
title Prominin 1/CD133 Endothelium Sustains Growth of Proneural Glioma
title_full Prominin 1/CD133 Endothelium Sustains Growth of Proneural Glioma
title_fullStr Prominin 1/CD133 Endothelium Sustains Growth of Proneural Glioma
title_full_unstemmed Prominin 1/CD133 Endothelium Sustains Growth of Proneural Glioma
title_short Prominin 1/CD133 Endothelium Sustains Growth of Proneural Glioma
title_sort prominin 1/cd133 endothelium sustains growth of proneural glioma
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3636202/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23637986
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0062150
work_keys_str_mv AT dingbisen prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma
AT jamesdaylon prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma
AT iyerrajiv prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma
AT falciatoriilaria prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma
AT hambardzumyandolores prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma
AT wangsu prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma
AT butlerjasonm prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma
AT rabbanysinay prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma
AT hormigoadilia prominin1cd133endotheliumsustainsgrowthofproneuralglioma