| Literature DB >> 31426573 |
Davide Ceresa1, Francesco Alessandrini1, Lorenzo Bosio2, Daniela Marubbi1,2, Daniele Reverberi3, Paolo Malatesta4,5, Irene Appolloni6.
Abstract
The high invasive phenotype of glioblastoma is one of the main causes of therapy inefficacy and tumor relapse. Cell adhesion molecules of the cadherin family are involved in cell migration and are known as master regulators of epithelial tumor invasiveness, but their role in glioblastoma is less understood. In particular, we recently demonstrated, in the syngeneic murine model, the occurrence of a previously undescribed cadherin switch between Cdh2 and Cdh4 during gliomagenesis, which is necessary for the acquisition of the highly infiltrative and tumorigenic phenotype of these cells. In the present study, we tested the role of Cdh4 in human gliomas. Our results on patient-derived glioma cells demonstrate a positive correlation between Cdh4 expression levels and the loss of cell-cell contact inhibition of proliferation controls that allows cells to proliferate over confluence. Moreover, the silencing of Cdh4 by artificial microRNAs induced a decrease in the infiltrative ability of human glioma cells both in vitro and in vivo. More strikingly, Cdh4 silencing induced an impairment of the tumorigenic potential of these cells after orthotopic transplantation in immunodeficient mice. Overall, we conclude that in human glioblastoma, Cdh4 can also actively contribute in regulating cell invasiveness and malignancy.Entities:
Keywords: R-cadherin; adherent junctions; brain tumor; cell polarity; contact inhibition; migration; proliferation
Mesh:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31426573 PMCID: PMC6718984 DOI: 10.3390/ijms20164028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Cdh4 expression in human gliomas. (a,b) Kaplan–Meier curves of all glioma (a) or glioblastoma (b) patients with low or high Cdh4 expression level. The inset shows the frequency plot of Cdh4 expression level in the analyzed tumors. Threshold was chosen to group in the high expression pool tumors with a Cdh4 expression level higher respect to healthy tissue. (c) The histogram shows the quantification by quantitative PCR of Cdh4 mRNA level in different human glioblastoma initiating cells (GIC) cultures normalized to GBM-23, which have the lowest Cdh4 expression level. Purple bars represent GICs whose proliferation is inhibited by cell–cell contact, while green bars represent GICs able to proliferate over cell confluence. The barplot in the inset shows the differential Cdh4 expression levels between these two groups of GICs. (d–g) Bright field micrographs representing over confluence GIC cultures. Scale bar: 500 µm. *** p < 0.001.
Figure 2(a,b) Quantification of Cdh4 protein expression by Western blot of different GIC cultures. (c–j) Representative immunofluorescence stainings of different human GIC cultures with anti-Cdh4 (c–f) and anti-Cdh2 (g–j) antibodies in red and Hoechst for nuclei staining in blue. Scale bar: 50 µm.
Figure 3Effect of the miRcdh4 transduction in GICs. (a,b) Quantification of Cdh4 mRNA expression by quantitative PCR (a) or protein expression by western blot (b) of Cdh4 silenced GICs compared to control transduced GIC cultures. (c–n) Representative immunofluorescence stainings with anti-Cdh2 (c–h) or anti-β-catenin (i–n) antibodies of different Cdh4 silenced or control transduced human GIC cultures. Nuclei are showed in blue using Hoechst. Scale bar: 25 µm. (o–q) Subcellular localization of β-catenin immunoreactivity in the different GIC cultures upon miRcdh4 or control transduction, assessed by image analysis. Values are reported as fraction of total β-catenin signal. * p < 0.05, *** p < 0.001.
Figure 4Effect of Cdh4 silencing on contact inhibition. (a–f) Bright field micrographs showing over confluence cultures of different Cdh4 silenced or control transduced human GICs. Scale bar: 500 µm. (g–j) Analysis of cell polarization of Cdh4 silenced GICs. (g) Example of the cell polarization analysis. Golgi apparatus was shown in green with anti-GM-130 antibody and nuclei in blue by Hoechst staining. (h–j) Polar histograms represent the migration directions of the cells close to the rim scratch. Cells with migration direction between −60° and +60° were considered polarized toward the scratch (green sector). χ2 test was used to assess whether the cells of each population were biased toward the scratch. * p < 0.05,*** p < 0.001.
Figure 5In vivo analysis of migration and proliferation of Cdh4 silenced GBM-07 cells. (a) Representative brain section near the injection site after 18 days from the transplant of Cdh4 silenced (green) or control (red) GBM-07 cells. Arrowheads point representative Cdh4 silenced cells; arrows point examples of control transduced cells; the border of the injection site is marked by a dashed line. Cell nuclei (blue) are counterstained with Hoechst. (b) Negative correlation between the enrichment of Cdh4 silenced cells and their distance from the injection site. For each section, all distances have been divided in 10 sectors of equal size to enable a cumulative analysis. Statistical analysis was performed by Pearson correlation test. (c–e) Representative images of tumor sections after 18 (c), 89 (d), and 179 (e) days after transplant. (f) Proportion of Cdh4 silenced cells in the total tumoral mass markedly decreases over time. Each point represents a different tumor and error bars show intra-tumoral variability. Statistical analysis was performed by the Pearson correlation test. Scale bar: 500 µm (a), 200 µm(c–e).