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Overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression

The Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) superfamily consists of cation-selective and non-selective ion channels playing an important role both in sensory physiology and in physiopathology in several complex diseases including cancers. Among TRP family, the mucolipin (TRPML1, −2, and −3) channels repr...

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Autores principales: Morelli, Maria Beatrice, Nabissi, Massimo, Amantini, Consuelo, Tomassoni, Daniele, Rossi, Francesco, Cardinali, Claudio, Santoni, Matteo, Arcella, Antonietta, Oliva, Maria Antonietta, Santoni, Angela, Polidori, Carlo, Mariani, Maria Paola, Santoni, Giorgio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5190050/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27248469
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.9661
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author Morelli, Maria Beatrice
Nabissi, Massimo
Amantini, Consuelo
Tomassoni, Daniele
Rossi, Francesco
Cardinali, Claudio
Santoni, Matteo
Arcella, Antonietta
Oliva, Maria Antonietta
Santoni, Angela
Polidori, Carlo
Mariani, Maria Paola
Santoni, Giorgio
author_facet Morelli, Maria Beatrice
Nabissi, Massimo
Amantini, Consuelo
Tomassoni, Daniele
Rossi, Francesco
Cardinali, Claudio
Santoni, Matteo
Arcella, Antonietta
Oliva, Maria Antonietta
Santoni, Angela
Polidori, Carlo
Mariani, Maria Paola
Santoni, Giorgio
author_sort Morelli, Maria Beatrice
collection PubMed
description The Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) superfamily consists of cation-selective and non-selective ion channels playing an important role both in sensory physiology and in physiopathology in several complex diseases including cancers. Among TRP family, the mucolipin (TRPML1, −2, and −3) channels represent a distinct subfamily of endosome/lysosome Ca(2+) channel proteins. Loss-of-function mutations in human TRPML-1 gene cause a neurodegenerative disease, Mucolipidosis Type IV, whereas at present no pathology has been associated to human TRPML-2 channels. Herein we found that human TRPML-2 is expressed both in normal astrocytes and neural stem/progenitor cells. By quantitative RT-PCR, western blot, cytofluorimetric and immunohistochemistry analysis we also demonstrated that TRPML-2 mRNA and protein are expressed at different levels in glioma tissues and high-grade glioma cell lines of astrocytic origin. TRPML-2 mRNA and protein levels increased with the pathological grade, starting from pylocitic astrocytoma (grade I) to glioblastoma (grade IV). Moreover, by RNA interference, we demonstrated a role played by TRPML-2 in survival and proliferation of glioma cell lines. In fact, knock-down of TRPML-2 inhibited the viability, altered the cell cycle, reduced the proliferation and induced apoptotic cell death in glioma cell lines. The DNA damage and apoptosis induced by TRPML-2 loss increased Ser139 H2AX phosphorylation and induced caspase-3 activation; furthermore, knock-down of TRPML-2 in T98 and U251 glioma cell lines completely abrogated Akt and Erk1/2 phosphorylation, as compared to untreated cells. Overall, the high TRPML-2 expression in glioma cells resulted in increased survival and proliferation signaling, suggesting a pro-tumorigenic role played by TRPML-2 in glioma progression.
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spelling pubmed-51900502017-01-05 Overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression Morelli, Maria Beatrice Nabissi, Massimo Amantini, Consuelo Tomassoni, Daniele Rossi, Francesco Cardinali, Claudio Santoni, Matteo Arcella, Antonietta Oliva, Maria Antonietta Santoni, Angela Polidori, Carlo Mariani, Maria Paola Santoni, Giorgio Oncotarget Research Paper The Transient Receptor Potential (TRP) superfamily consists of cation-selective and non-selective ion channels playing an important role both in sensory physiology and in physiopathology in several complex diseases including cancers. Among TRP family, the mucolipin (TRPML1, −2, and −3) channels represent a distinct subfamily of endosome/lysosome Ca(2+) channel proteins. Loss-of-function mutations in human TRPML-1 gene cause a neurodegenerative disease, Mucolipidosis Type IV, whereas at present no pathology has been associated to human TRPML-2 channels. Herein we found that human TRPML-2 is expressed both in normal astrocytes and neural stem/progenitor cells. By quantitative RT-PCR, western blot, cytofluorimetric and immunohistochemistry analysis we also demonstrated that TRPML-2 mRNA and protein are expressed at different levels in glioma tissues and high-grade glioma cell lines of astrocytic origin. TRPML-2 mRNA and protein levels increased with the pathological grade, starting from pylocitic astrocytoma (grade I) to glioblastoma (grade IV). Moreover, by RNA interference, we demonstrated a role played by TRPML-2 in survival and proliferation of glioma cell lines. In fact, knock-down of TRPML-2 inhibited the viability, altered the cell cycle, reduced the proliferation and induced apoptotic cell death in glioma cell lines. The DNA damage and apoptosis induced by TRPML-2 loss increased Ser139 H2AX phosphorylation and induced caspase-3 activation; furthermore, knock-down of TRPML-2 in T98 and U251 glioma cell lines completely abrogated Akt and Erk1/2 phosphorylation, as compared to untreated cells. Overall, the high TRPML-2 expression in glioma cells resulted in increased survival and proliferation signaling, suggesting a pro-tumorigenic role played by TRPML-2 in glioma progression. Impact Journals LLC 2016-05-27 /pmc/articles/PMC5190050/ /pubmed/27248469 http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.9661 Text en Copyright: © 2016 Morelli et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ 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 credited.
spellingShingle Research Paper
Morelli, Maria Beatrice
Nabissi, Massimo
Amantini, Consuelo
Tomassoni, Daniele
Rossi, Francesco
Cardinali, Claudio
Santoni, Matteo
Arcella, Antonietta
Oliva, Maria Antonietta
Santoni, Angela
Polidori, Carlo
Mariani, Maria Paola
Santoni, Giorgio
Overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression
title Overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression
title_full Overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression
title_fullStr Overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression
title_full_unstemmed Overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression
title_short Overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression
title_sort overexpression of transient receptor potential mucolipin-2 ion channels in gliomas: role in tumor growth and progression
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5190050/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27248469
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.9661
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