| Literature DB >> 25485306 |
Rickey Miller1, Michele L DeCandio1, Yaenette Dixon-Mah1, Pierre Giglio1, W Alex Vandergrift1, Naren L Banik2, Sunil J Patel1, Abhay K Varma1, Arabinda Das1.
Abstract
Meningiomas are by far the most common tumors arising from the meninges. A myriad of aberrant signaling pathways involved with meningioma tumorigenesis, have been discovered. Understanding these disrupted pathways will aid in deciphering the relationship between various genetic changes and their downstream effects on meningioma pathogenesis. An understanding of the genetic and molecular profile of meningioma would provide a valuable first step towards developing more effective treatments for this intracranial tumor. Chromosomes 1, 10, 14, 22, their associated genes, and other potential targets have been linked to meningioma proliferation and progression. It is presumed that through an understanding of these genetic factors, more educated meningioma treatment techniques can be implemented. Future therapies will include combinations of targeted molecular agents including gene therapy, si-RNA mediation, proton therapy, and other approaches as a result of continued progress in the understanding of genetic and biological changes associated with meningiomas. This review provides an overview of the current knowledge of the genetic, signaling and molecular profile of meningioma and possible treatments strategies associated with such profiles.Entities:
Keywords: Meningioma; Merlin; Molecular genetics; NF2; Proliferation; Tumorgenesis
Year: 2014 PMID: 25485306 PMCID: PMC4255716
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol Neurosurg ISSN: 2373-8995
Scale by which the World Health Organization (WHO) gradess meningiomas.
| WHO | Grade Description |
|---|---|
| Grade I (Benign) |
Any histologic pattern other than clear cell, chordoid, papillary, or rhabdoid. Lacks criteria of atypical or an aplasticmeningioma |
| Grade II (Atypical) |
Mitoses: 4–19 (10 hpf) Macronuclei, spontaneous necrosis, hypercellularity, small cell formation, sheeting architecture (Any 3 of these 5 parameters or possibly more) Meningioma protrudes into the parenchyma of the brain Clear cell or chordoid cell types |
| Grade III (Anaplastic) |
Mitoses: 20+ (10 hpf) Apparent anaplasia (carcinoma/sarcoma-like histology) Rhabdoid or papillary cell type |
Figure 1Meningiomaupregulation and downregulation.
These are the genes that are upregulated and downregulated by menigiomas in the CNS. The measure to which a gene is upregulated or downregulated is recorded on an ROC curve and that gene is given a value. The higher a gene’s ROC value is the more upregulated or downregulated a gene is. CKS2 has an ROC value of 0.743 which is highest among all upregulated genes while VASP has an ROC value of 0.89 which is highest among all downregulated genes [8].
Genes associated with meningiomas.
| Gene (Location) | Genetic Product/Function |
|---|---|
| NF2 (22q12.2) | Merlin (Protein); Tumor Suppressor |
| c-sis (22q13.1) | B-chain (PDGF-B); Growth Factor |
| BCR (22q11) | bcr (protein); GTPase activator, serine/threoninekinase (Wnt pathway) |
| TP73 (1p36.3) | p73; Apoptosis, Blocks proapoptotic function |
| PTEN (10p23.3) | phosphatidylinositol-3, 4,5- trisphosphate 3-phosphate; Tumor Suppressor |
| SUFU (10q24) | sufu (protein); Negative regulator in hedgehog pathway |
| sufu (protein); | Negative regulator in hedgehog pathway |
| AKT1 (14q32.32) | Protein Kinase B; Serine/Threonine Kinase |
| c-fos (14q24.3) | c-fos (protein); Transcription Factor |
| CDNK2A(9p21) | p16; Tumor Suppressor, Cell Cycle Progression (G1/S phase) |
| CDNK2B(9p21) | p15; Tumor Suppressor, Cell Cycle Progression (G1/S phase) |
| ARF (9p21) | p14; Tumor Suppressor, Cell Apoptosis Regulation |
| PTCH1 (9q22.3) | patched protein; Hedgehog Pathway Receptor |
| c-myc (8q24) | c-myc (protein); Transcription Factor |
| c-mos (8q11) | c-mos (protein); Serine Kinase |
| SFRP1 (8p11.21) | secreted frizzled-related protein 1; Extracellular signaling ligand secretion (Wnt pathway) |
| Ha-ras (11p15.5) | p21; Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor |
| IGF2 (11p15.5) | insulin-like growth factor 2; Hormone |
| bcl-2 (18q21.33) | bcl-2 (protein); Apoptosis regulator |
| STAT3 (17q21.2) | signal transducer & activator of transcription 3;Transcription factor |
| SMO (7q32.1) | smoothened GPCR protein; Cell Localization (Hedgehog Pathway) |
| GLI1 (12q13.3) | zinc finger proteins; Transcription Factor (Hedgehog Pathway) |
| FOXM1 (12p13.3) | forkhead box protein M1; Transcription Factor (Hedgehog Pathway) |
| GLI2 (2q14.2) | zinc finger proteins; Transcription Factor (Hedgehog Pathway) |
| GLIS2 (16p13.3) | zinc finger proteins; Transcription Factor (Hedgehog Pathway) |
| CDH1 (16q22.1) | E-cadherin; Cell Adhesion (Wnt Pathway) sufu (protein); |
Figure 2Signaling pathways involving meningiomas.
These are the main pathways that have been linked to meningioma proliferation, malignancy progression, and tumorgenesis. The p53/pRB pathway plays a major role in the cell cycle by controlling the transition from G1 to S phase through the tumor suppressor gene pRB. The hedgehog/PTCH pathway has genes that are responsible for cell growth activation and suppression regulated by the SMO gene but when activated GLI transcription factors can also be activated. The Notch pathway is mediated by a number of transmembrane and serves as an intracellular communication system relaying messages throughout the cell. The PI3K/AKT/MAPK are two pathways that have been linked to malignant menigiomas with high levels of phosphorylatedAkt found in Grade II/III menigiomas (PI3K/Akt) and recurrence rate of meningiomas increase with reduced levels of MAPK. The Wnt/β catenin pathway deals more with benign (Grade I) menigiomas than with higher-grade menigiomas because many benign menigiomas have shown deletions in the APC gene whichis a major gene of this pathway. (Choy, Kim, Nagasawa, et al. 2011).