Literature DB >> 20581868

Replication stress and oxidative damage contribute to aberrant constitutive activation of DNA damage signalling in human gliomas.

J Bartkova1, P Hamerlik, M-T Stockhausen, J Ehrmann, A Hlobilkova, H Laursen, O Kalita, Z Kolar, H S Poulsen, H Broholm, J Lukas, J Bartek.   

Abstract

Malignant gliomas, the deadliest of brain neoplasms, show rampant genetic instability and resistance to genotoxic therapies, implicating potentially aberrant DNA damage response (DDR) in glioma pathogenesis and treatment failure. Here, we report on gross, aberrant constitutive activation of DNA damage signalling in low- and high-grade human gliomas, and analyze the sources of such endogenous genotoxic stress. Based on analyses of human glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) cell lines, normal astrocytes and clinical specimens from grade II astrocytomas (n=41) and grade IV GBM (n=60), we conclude that the DDR machinery is constitutively activated in gliomas, as documented by phosphorylated histone H2AX (gammaH2AX), activation of the ATM-Chk2-p53 pathway, 53BP1 foci and other markers. Oxidative DNA damage (8-oxoguanine) was high in some GBM cell lines and many GBM tumors, while it was low in normal brain and grade II astrocytomas, despite the degree of DDR activation was higher in grade II tumors. Markers indicative of ongoing DNA replication stress (Chk1 activation, Rad17 phosphorylation, replication protein A foci and single-stranded DNA) were present in GBM cells under high- or low-oxygen culture conditions and in clinical specimens of both low- and high-grade tumors. The observed global checkpoint signaling, in contrast to only focal areas of overabundant p53 (indicative of p53 mutation) in grade II astrocytomas, are consistent with DDR activation being an early event in gliomagenesis, initially limiting cell proliferation (low Ki-67 index) and selecting for mutations of p53 and likely other genes that allow escape (higher Ki-67 index) from the checkpoint and facilitate tumor progression. Overall, these results support the potential role of the DDR machinery as a barrier to gliomagenesis and indicate that replication stress, rather than oxidative stress, fuels the DNA damage signalling in early stages of astrocytoma development.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 20581868     DOI: 10.1038/onc.2010.249

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncogene        ISSN: 0950-9232            Impact factor:   9.867


  96 in total

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5.  Patterns of DNA damage response in intracranial germ cell tumors versus glioblastomas reflect cell of origin rather than brain environment: implications for the anti-tumor barrier concept and treatment.

Authors:  Jirina Bartkova; Christina E Hoei-Hansen; Katerina Krizova; Petra Hamerlik; Niels E Skakkebæk; Ewa Rajpert-De Meyts; Jiri Bartek
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6.  Therapeutic targeting of constitutive PARP activation compromises stem cell phenotype and survival of glioblastoma-initiating cells.

Authors:  M Venere; P Hamerlik; Q Wu; R D Rasmussen; L A Song; A Vasanji; N Tenley; W A Flavahan; A B Hjelmeland; J Bartek; J N Rich
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7.  Time-course analysis of DNA damage response-related genes after in vitro radiation in H460 and H1229 lung cancer cell lines.

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Review 9.  Revisiting p53 for cancer-specific chemo- and radiotherapy: ten years after.

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