| Literature DB >> 32002804 |
Lauren R Olafson1, Manuri Gunawardena1, Sheri Nixdorf1, Kerrie L McDonald1, Robert W Rapkins2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: The phenotypic and genotypic landscapes in multifocal glioblastoma (MF GBM) cases can vary greatly among lesions. In a MF GBM patient, the rapid development of a secondary lesion was investigated to determine if a unique genetic signature could account for the apparent increased malignancy of this lesion.Entities:
Keywords: Gain-of-function; Glioblastoma; Multifocal; TP53
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32002804 PMCID: PMC7075848 DOI: 10.1007/s11060-019-03318-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurooncol ISSN: 0167-594X Impact factor: 4.130
Fig. 1Pre-operative MRI scans exhibiting two expansive bulky lesions arising in the left thalamus (a and b) and cerebella hemisphere c with an irregular ring contrast enhancement
Positive biomarkers and mutated genes analysed by pyrosequencing, in situ hybridisation, IHC and NGS for G52 and G53 tumour samples
| Pyrosequencing | G52 Tumour | G53 Tumour |
|---|---|---|
| Pyro SEQ- | Unmethylated | Unmethylated |
| In situ hybridisation | ||
| EGFR | Positive | Positive |
| IHC | ||
| EGFR | Positive | Positive |
| PTEN | Positive | Positive |
| TOPIIA | Positive | Positive |
| PGP | Positive | Positive |
| Next generation sequencing | ||
| Mutated | Mutated | |
| Mutated | Mutated | |
| Mutated | Mutated | |
| Mutated | Mutated | |
| Wild-type | Mutated | |
Fig. 2Nucleotide sequence analysis of TP53 exon 8 in G52 and G53 tumour samples. a Wt nucleotide sequence at codon 273. b G52 and G53 tumour nucleotide sequence at codon 273. Dot indicates the position of the C to T nucleotide substitution and c.818G.A (p.R273H) mutation of the TP53 gene in the G53 tumour
Fig. 3p53 mutation promotes cell proliferation, migration and invasion in multifocal primary glioblastoma cell lines in vitro. a Real-time xCelligence analysis of proliferation (represented by cell index) of G52 (red) and G53 (black). b 24 h timepoint analysis of proliferation (represented by cell index) levels between G53 and G52. Error bars represent standard deviations. p < 0.1; *p < 0.02. c Real-time xCelligence analysis of migration (represented by cell index) of G53 and G52. d 24 h timepoint analysis of migration (represented by cell index) levels between G53 (left frontal lesion) and G52 (left thalamic lesion). Error bars represent standard deviations. p < 0.1; p < 0.8. e Real-time xCelligence analysis of invasion (represented by cell index) of G53 (black) and G52 (red). f 24 h timepoint analysis of invasion (represented by cell index) levels between G53 (left frontal lesion) and G52 (left thalamic lesion). Error bars represent standard deviations. p < 0.2; p < 0.1
Fig. 4Colony formation escalation in a p53 mutant cell line. a G53 colony formation (crystal violet stain) increases across all cell seeding densities (50 to 600 cells) over 14 days compared to G52 (inset magnification × 20). b Colonies were quantified using a stereomicroscope and colony counting pen. G53 colony counts consistently increase over time with increasing cell density, whereas G52 demonstrates no change in formation
Fig. 5Higher cell proliferation in p53 mutant. a Labelling index for Ki-67 in G52 and G53 (×40 magnification). b LI was measured as the percentage of positive cells per 1000 cells. *p < 0.05