| Literature DB >> 28571041 |
D Maciaczyk1, D Picard2,3,4, L Zhao1, K Koch1, D Herrera-Rios1, G Li5,6, V Marquardt2,3,4,7, D Pauck2,3,4, T Hoerbelt8, W Zhang5,6, D M Ouwens8, M Remke2,3,4, T Jiang5,6,9, H J Steiger1, J Maciaczyk1, U D Kahlert1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glioblastoma is the most common and most lethal primary brain cancer. CBF1 (also known as Recombination signal Binding Protein for immunoglobulin kappa J, RBPJ) is the cardinal transcriptional regulator of the Notch signalling network and has been shown to promote cancer stem-like cells (CSCs) in glioblastoma. Recent studies suggest that some of the malignant properties of CSCs are mediated through the activation of pro-invasive programme of epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT). Little is known whether CBF1 is involved in the EMT-like phenotype of glioma cells.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28571041 PMCID: PMC5520214 DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2017.157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Figure 1CBF1 knockdown results in expression of Notch-like signature. (A) CBF1 knockdown efficiency as assessed by western blotting-based protein quantification. (B) Cells with blocked CBF1 show increased levels of Notch pathway target gene expression (HES1, HES5 and HEY1) as compared with control cells carrying empty pLKO.1 vector. *P=0.05, **P=0.01, ***P=0.001.
Figure 2Inhibition of CBF1 impairs cellular invasion of glioma neurospheres. (A) GBM neurospheres with inhibited CBF1 are significantly less invasive in vitro as shown by representative microscope capturing and quantification of Boyden chamber assays. (B) CBF1 inhibition robustly suppresses the expression of pro-invasive EMT-activator ZEB1 as shown by western blotting. (C) Additional qPCR analysis revealed CBF1 blockade-suppressed CD44s and SNAI1 transcription. (D) CBF1 inhibition did not alter the growth of GBM neurospheres as tested by Titer Blue assay. *P=0.05, **P=0.01, ***P=0.001. A full colour version of this figure is available at the British Journal of Cancer journal online.
Figure 3CBF1 is increased in hypoxia. (A) CBF1 mRNA is increased in hypoxic areas of glioblastoma samples as defined as pseudopalisades (**P=0.01, ***P=0.001) and peri-necrotic areas retrieved from the IVY Glioblastoma data set. (B) Hypoxic exposure (H, 2% oxygen, 48 h) increased the levels of HIF1α and led to induction of CBF1 (GBM1 and 407p) as compared with cells grown in normoxia (N). A full colour version of this figure is available at the British Journal of Cancer journal online.
Figure 4CBF1 inhibition reduces chemoresistance to members of various drug classes. Glioma cells with blocked CBF1 are more sensitive to the treatment with EGF-R inhibitor AZD 9291 (mesylate), VEGF-R inhibitor Cediranib and PI3K/mTOR inhibitor PF-04691502 as compared with pLKO.1 control cells. (A) Toxicity curves represent the results of the automated drug library screen, whereas (B) shows bar blots of targeted drug tests normalised to corresponding isogenic cells treated with drug solvent only. *P=0.05, **P=0.01.
Figure 5CBF1 inhibition can reduce glycolytic metabolism. (A) Cells with blocked CBF1 (=shRNAi construct b) have significantly reduced glycolytic activity as assessed by quantification of ECAR under defined glucose supply. (B) CBF1 knockdown can reduce the expression levels of central genes of glycolysis (enolase1=ENO1; hexokinase 1/2=HK1/2; and pyruvate kinase isoenzyme M2=PKM2) at various degrees with the strongest inhibition observed in GBM1 (all tested genes) to strong in 407p (ENO1 and PKM2) to moderate in JHH (ENO1). Interestingly, levels of gene inhibition correlates with the percentage of decreased ECAR from the highest in GBM1 to high in 407p to moderate in JHH. *P=0.05, ***P=0.001.
Figure 6CBF1 expression in brain tumours is clinically prognostic and intertumoral heterogeneous. (A) Mean CBF1 expression in different LGGs and glioblastoma showing relative low level of activation in the latter. PA= pilocytic astrocytoma; A=astrocytoma; OA=oligoastrocytoma; OD=oligodendroglioma; GBM=glioblastoma. (B) High levels of CBF1 predicts prolonged overall survival in glioblastoma patients from the Western populations (data sets: French, TCGA) but not in the Eastern cohort (CGGA). (C) The prognostic value is particularly eminent in female patients and (D) after therapy with alkylating agent TMZ. (E) CBF1 is strongly increased in the proneural subgroup of glioblastoma (F) as well as in tumours with R132H mutant IDH1. The predictive value of IDH1 mutation status with regards to overall survival does apply to tumours with high CBF1 expression but not under low CBF1 activation. *P=0.05, **P=0.01, ***P=0.001.
Figure 7Clinical prognosis of CBF1 expression in LGGs and medulloblastomas. (A) High CBF1 expression correlates with very significantly prolonged survival of patients with LGG (WHO II+III). (B) Intertumoral heterogeneous activation of CBF1 in medulloblastoma subtypes with clinical worst prognostic Group 3 tumours having the lowest CBF1 level. High CBF1 predicts for significant longer survival in all medulloblastoma (and SHH subgroup) but predicts significantly shortened overall survival in Group 3 and Group 4 tumours. *P=0.05, **P=0.01, ***P=0.001.