| Literature DB >> 30208949 |
T A M Bouwens van der Vlis1,2,3, J M Kros4, D A M Mustafa3, R T A van Wijck5, L Ackermans2, P M van Hagen5,6, P J van der Spek1,3.
Abstract
The human complement system is represents the main effector arm of innate immunity and its ambivalent function in cancer has been subject of ongoing dispute. Glioma stem-like cells (GSC) residing in specific niches within glioblastomas (GBM) are capable of self-renewal and tumor proliferation. Recent data are indicative of the influence of the complement system on the maintenance of these cells. It appears that the role of the complement system in glial tumorigenesis, particularly its influence on GSC niches and GSC maintenance, is significant and warrants further exploration for therapeutic interventions.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30208949 PMCID: PMC6134703 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-018-0591-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1Schematic and simplified representation of the complement system. Complement regulatory proteins, both fluid-phase and membrane- bound are coloured light grey. C1INH: C1-inhibitor; CD46: Membrane Cofactor Protein; CD55: Complement decay-accelerating factor; FI: Complement factor I; CR1: Complement receptor type 1; FH: Complement factor H; C4BP: C4bbinding protein
Fig. 2Proposed interaction of complement C3a and C5a with GSC regulatory mechanisms. C5a-C5aR interaction activates PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling and PKCζ but suppresses p21 with subsequent OCT-4 activation. Intracellular activation of C3a by cathepsin-L may occur, thereby sustaining basal mTOR activation. Either intracellular or extracellular derived C3a phosphorylates STAT-3 and causes an increase of SOX-2 expression
Complement protein in the GBM tumor
| Complement proteins | Niche | Mechanism | Proposed effect |
|---|---|---|---|
| C1q | GSC | Wnt activation | Stimulate GSC differentiation |
| Perivascular | Priming SDF-1 gradient | GSC migration | |
| Perivascular | gC1qR interaction | Potentiate tumor cell invasiveness, chemoattractant | |
| Perivascular | cC1qR interaction (IL-8, MCP-1 and IL-6 secretion) | GSC migration | |
| Microenvironment | GAM-M2 induction | Immunosuppression | |
| Invasive | gC1qR (Bradykinin induction) | Tumor cell invasiveness | |
| MBL | Microenvironment | GAM-M2 induction | Immunosuppression |
| C3 | Microenvironment | MDSC recruitment | Immunosuppression |
| C3b | Microenvironment | Treg induction (ligand for CD46) | Immunosuppression |
| Microenvironment | GAM-M2 induction | Immunosuppression | |
| C3a/C3aR | Hypoxic | STAT-3 activation | GSC maintenance |
| GSC | mTOR activation | GSC maintenance | |
| Hypoxic | NOX-4 activation, (STAT-3, HIF-α) | GSC maintenance | |
| GSC | SOX-2 activation | GSC maintenance | |
| Microenvironment | Chemotaxis immune cells | ||
| CD46 | Hypoxic | Jagged-1-Notch disruption | GSC maintenance |
| Perivascular | |||
| C5a/C5aR | Invasive nice | PKCζ activation | Potentiate tumor cell invasiveness |
| GSC | PI3K/Akt/mTOR | GSC maintenance | |
| GSC | P21 inhibition | GSC maintenance | |
| GSC | OCT-4 expression | GSC maintenance | |
| Perivascular | MMP-9, MT1-MMP activation | Increase tumor cell invasiveness | |
| Perivascular | MCP-1 secretion | Increase tumor cell invasiveness | |
| Perivascular | TGF-β | GSC differentation into vascular pericytes | |
| Perivascular | NO secretion (iNOS/eNOS induction) | GSC maintenance | |
| Perivascular | VEGF expression | Vascular tube formation | |
| Microenvironment | Chemotaxis immune cells | ||
| Microenvironment | Treg induction (High concentration) | Immunosuppression | |
| Microenvironment | GAM-M1 activation (balanced C activation) | Anti-tumor response | |
| Microenvironment | MDSC recruitment (ROS) | Immunosuppression | |
| C5b-C9 | Perivascular | bFGF release | GSC dedifferentiation |
Fig. 3Graphical summary of the potential actions of the complement system in the glial tumor microenvironment