| Literature DB >> 26258069 |
Tracy Seymour1, Anna Nowak2, Foteini Kakulas3.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most common and fatal type of primary brain tumor. Gliosarcoma (GSM) is a rarer and more aggressive variant of GBM that has recently been considered a potentially different disease. Current clinical treatment for both GBM and GSM includes maximal surgical resection followed by post-operative radiotherapy and concomitant and adjuvant chemotherapy. Despite recent advances in treating other solid tumors, treatment for GBM and GSM still remains palliative, with a very poor prognosis and a median survival rate of 12-15 months. Treatment failure is a result of a number of causes, including resistance to radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Recent research has applied the cancer stem cells theory of carcinogenesis to these tumors, suggesting the existence of a small subpopulation of glioma stem-like cells (GSCs) within these tumors. GSCs are thought to contribute to tumor progression, treatment resistance, and tumor recapitulation post-treatment and have become the focus of novel therapy strategies. Their isolation and investigation suggest that GSCs share critical signaling pathways with normal embryonic and somatic stem cells, but with distinct alterations. Research must focus on identifying these variations as they may present novel therapeutic targets. Targeting pluripotency transcription factors, SOX2, OCT4, and Nanog homeobox, demonstrates promising therapeutic potential that if applied in isolation or together with current treatments may improve overall survival, reduce tumor relapse, and achieve a cure for these patients.Entities:
Keywords: Nanog homeobox; SRY (sex determining region Y)-box 2; glioblastoma; glioma stem cells; gliosarcoma; octamer-binding transcription factor 4; pluripotency genes
Year: 2015 PMID: 26258069 PMCID: PMC4507454 DOI: 10.3389/fonc.2015.00159
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Oncol ISSN: 2234-943X Impact factor: 6.244
Figure 1Proposed representations of the development of glioma stem cells. (A) Aberrant overexpression of pluripotent transcription factors, SOX2, OCT4, and NANOG, promote multilineage potential in glioma stem cells. Aberrant overexpression of pluripotent transcription factors activates stem cell networks while deactivating differentiation pathways. This promotes the formation of self-renewing glioma stem cells with multilineage potential. (B) Multilineage neural stem cells express SOX2, OCT4, and NANOG. Oncogenic mutations may cause aberrant expression of pluripotent transcription factors resulting to multilineage glioma stem cells.
Figure 2Schematic representation of the cancer stem cell theory in glioma tumors, illustrating the effect of current clinical treatments on enriching glioma stem cell populations. Current radiotherapy and chemotherapies target highly proliferative cells, leaving a small population of quiescent cells that over time cause the recapitulation of the tumor.
Figure 3Immunohistochemical staining of a glioblastoma patient tumor sample depicting co-expression of pluripotency genes SOX2 (green) (20) and NANOG (red). Blue shows nuclear staining (DAPI).