| Literature DB >> 33059737 |
Shuai Han1, Wei Zhen2, Tongqi Guo2, Jianjun Zou2, Fuyong Li3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Glioblastoma is a common disease of the central nervous system (CNS), with high morbidity and mortality. In the infiltrate in the tumor microenvironment, tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) are abundant, which are important factors in glioblastoma progression. However, the exact details of TAMs in glioblastoma progression have yet to be determined.Entities:
Keywords: AKT/mTOR; CSF-1; Glioblastoma; SETDB1; TAMs
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33059737 PMCID: PMC7560339 DOI: 10.1186/s13046-020-01730-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Clin Cancer Res ISSN: 0392-9078
Clinicopathologic Features of SETDB1 expression in glioblastoma
| Low SETDB1 level ( | High SETDB1 level (n = 40) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 55 ± 13.33 | 57 ± 12.65 | 0.432 | |
| 0.469 | |||
| Male | 24 | 29 | |
| Female | 16 | 11 | |
| 0.001 | |||
| I, II | 32 | 7 | |
| III, IV | 8 | 33 |
Real-time PCR primers
| SETDB1 | Forward | 5′-GGAGGAACTTCGTCAGTACATTG-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-TCTTTCTGTAGTACCCACGTCTC-3′ | |
| CSF-1 | Forward | 5′-AGTATTGCCAAGGAGGTGTCAG-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-ATCTGGCATGAAGTCTCCATTT-3′ | |
| TGF-β | Forward | 5′-AAGAAGTCACCCGCGTGCTA-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-TGTGTGATGTCTTTGGTTTTGTCA-3′ | |
| IL-8 | Forward | 5′-GTGCAGTTTTGCCAAGGAGT-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-TTATGAATTCTCAGCCCTCTTCAAAAACTTCTC-3′ | |
| IL-4 | Forward | 5′-CCGTAACAGACATCTTTGCTGCC-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-GAGTGTCCTTCTCATGGTGGCT-3′ | |
| IL-13 | Forward | 5′-CCTCTGACCCTTAAGGAGCTTAT-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CGTTGCACAGGGGAGTCTT-3′ | |
| VEGF | Forward | 5′-CAAGCCAAGGCGGTGAGCCA-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-TCTGCCGGAGTCTCGCCCTC-3′ | |
| CCL2 | Forward | 5′-AGGTGTCCCAAAGAAGCTGTA-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-ATGTCTGGACCCATTCCTTCT-3′ | |
| CCL20 | Forward | 5′-TCCTGGCTGCTTTGATGTCA-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CAAAGTTGCTTGCTGCTTCTGA-3′ | |
| CD86 | Forward | 5′-TCTCCACGGAAACAGCATCT-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CTTACGGAAGCACCCATGAT-3′ | |
| CD163 | Forward | 5′-TCCACACGTCCAGAACAGTC-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CCTTGGAAACAGAGACAGGC-3′ | |
| IL-10 | Forward | 5′-ATGCTGCCTGCTCTTACTGACTG-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CCCAAGTAACCCTTAAAGTCCTGC-3′ | |
| CCL17 | Forward | 5′-AGGGACCTGCACACAGAGAC-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-AGGTAGTCCCGGGAGACAGT-3′ | |
| CCL22 | Forward | 5′-TGCCATCACGTTTAGTGAAGG-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-CGGCAGGATTTTGAGGTCCA-3′ | |
| GAPDH | Forward | 5′-AATGGATTTGGACGCATTGGT-3′ |
| Reverse | 5′-TTTGCACTGGTACGTGTTGAT-3′ |
Knockdown sequence
| Target sequence | |
|---|---|
| si AKT | GGAGGGUUGGCUGCACAAA |
| sh SETDB1 | GGTGATGAGTACTTTGCCA |
Fig. 1SETDB1 was upregulated in glioblastoma tissues and corelative with poor tumor progression. a Representative IHC staining of SETDB1 protein expression in glioblastoma tumor tissues (T) and adjacent normal tissue (N) of three patients. Scale bar: 50 μm. b mRNA level of SETDB1 was analyzed by real-time PCR in glioblastoma tumor tissues (T) and adjacent normal tissue (N) of patients. c Western blotting of SETDB1 expression in NHAs and indicated glioblastoma cells. d mRNA level of SETDB1 was analyzed by real-time PCR in NHAs and indicated glioblastoma cells. e Kaplan-Meier survival analysis indicated that glioblastoma patients with high expression of SETDB1 had worse relapse-free survival
Cox regression analysis for relapse-free survival in glioblastoma patients
| Univariate analysis | Multivariate analysis | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hazard ratio (95% CI) | Hazard ratio (95% CI) | |||
| SETDB1 expression (high vs. low) | 2.234 (0.981–4.128) | 0.023 | 2.459 (1.232–5.483) | 0.018 |
| Age | 1.321 (0.548–2.325) | 0.563 | 1.431 (0.674–2.543) | 0.554 |
| Male vs. Female | 1.453 (0.674–3.092) | 0.345 | 1.543 (0.783–3.482) | 0.323 |
| Stage (III, IV vs. I. II) | 1.982 (1.128–3.763) | 0.007 | 1.889 (1.093–3.542) | 0.011 |
Fig. 2SETDB1 promotes cell growth, and apoptosis in vitro and in vivo. a mRNA level of SETDB1 in indicated cells transfected with SETDB1 plasmid or control vector. b Western blotting of SETDB1 in indicated cells transfected with SETDB1 plasmid or control vector. c CCK-8 of indicated cells transfected with SETDB1 plasmid or control vector. d Colony formation of indicated cells transfected with SETDB1 plasmid or control vector. e Western blotting of indicated proteins in U251 cells transfected with SETDB1 plasmid or control vector treated with 500 nM staurosporine (STS) for 24 h. f Ectopic expression of SETDB1 accelerated growth of U251 xenografts in nude mice (n = 6) as compared to controls. g Western blotting of ectopic expression of SETDB1 in tumors from U251-SETDB1 groups. h Representative images of Ki67-positive cells in vector and SETDB1 transfected tumors. Scale bar: 50 μm. Results were expressed as means ± SD of 3 independent experiments. **, P < 0.01
Fig. 3SETDB1 promotes invasion, migration and EMT of glioblastoma cells. a Representative images of matrigel invasion assay revealed that ectopic expression of SETDB1 promoted glioblastoma cells invasion. Scale bar: 100 μm. b Representative images of wound-healing assay indicated that ectopic expression of SETDB1 promoted cell migration in glioblastoma cells. Scale bar: 100 μm. c Western blotting of mesenchymal markers (Slug and Vimentin) and epithelial markers (E-cadherin) in cells transfected with SETDB1 or control plasmid. Scale bar: 100 μm. d Representative images of matrigel invasion assay revealed that downregulation of SETDB1 suppressed glioblastoma cells invasion. Scale bar: 100 μm. e Representative images of wound-healing assay indicated that downregulation of SETDB1 suppressed cell migration in glioblastoma cells. f Western blotting of mesenchymal markers (Slug and Vimentin) and epithelial markers (E-cadherin) in cells transfected with stable shRNA against SETDB1. Results were expressed as means ± SD of 3 independent experiments. **, P < 0.01
Fig. 4SETDB1 regulates CSF-1 level in glioblastoma cells. a Real-time PCR for mRNA level of genes coding for tumor-associated macrophage (TAMs) recruitment associated cytokines in U87 cells with SETDB1 overexpression. b Real-time PCR for mRNA level of genes coding for tumor-associated macrophage (TAMs) recruitment associated cytokines in U251 cells with SETDB1 overexpression. c Real-time PCR for mRNA level of genes coding for tumor-associated macrophage (TAMs) recruitment associated cytokines in U87 cells with SETDB1 knockdown. d Real-time PCR for mRNA level of genes coding for tumor-associated macrophage (TAMs) recruitment associated cytokines in U251 cells with SETDB1 knockdown. e Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) analysis of CSF-1 concentration in the supernatants of cultured glioblastoma cells with SETDB1 overexpression. f Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) analysis of CSF-1 concentration in the supernatants of cultured glioblastoma cells with SETDB1 knockdown. g TCGA database indicated the correlation of CD163 and CSF-1 in glioblastoma tissues. h TCGA database indicated the correlation of SETDB1 and CSF-1 in glioblastoma tissues. Results were expressed as means ± SD of 3 independent experiments. **, P < 0.01
Fig. 5PI3K/AKT signaling pathway mediated SETDB1-induced CSF-1 induction. a Western blotting of indicated proteins in U87 cells transfected with SETDB1 overexpression with or without MK-2206 pretreatment. b Western blotting of indicated proteins in U251 cells transfected with SETDB1 overexpression with or without MK-2206 pretreatment. c Western blotting of indicated proteins in U87 cells transfected with SETDB1 overexpression with or without siRNA against AKT. d Western blotting of indicated proteins in U251 cells transfected with SETDB1 overexpression with or without siRNA against AKT. e Western blotting of indicated proteins in U87 cells transfected with SETDB1 overexpression with or without rapamycin pretreatment. f Western blotting of indicated proteins in U251 cells transfected with SETDB1 overexpression with or without rapamycin pretreatment. g Western blotting of indicated proteins in control and SETDB1 overexpression xenograft tumors. h Western blotting of indicated proteins in control and SETDB1 knockdown xenograft tumors
Fig. 6SETDB1 promotes macrophage recruitment and polarization. a Transwell migration assay of macrophage by CM from indicated U87 cells. b Real-time PCR for the expression levels of CD68 and CD163 in macrophages treated with CM from U87 cells as indicated. c Flow cytometry analysis for the expression levels of CD163 in macrophages treated with CM from glioblastoma cells as indicated. d Real-time PCR for the mRNA expression of tumor-associated macrophage (TAM) characteristic cytokines in macrophages treated with CM from glioblastoma cells as indicated. e Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the secretion of tumor-associated macrophage (TAM) characteristic cytokines in macrophages treated with CM from U87 cells as indicated. f Real-time PCR for the mRNA expression of M1-related cytokines in macrophages treated with CM from U87 cells as indicated. g Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) for the secretion of M1-related cytokines in macrophages treated with CM from U87 cells as indicated. Results were expressed as means ± SD of 3 independent experiments. **, P < 0.01
Fig. 7SETDB1 promotes tumor growth in a macrophage-dependent manner. a Western blotting of SETDB1 overexpression efficiency in GL261 cells. b Treatment scheme depicting intraperitoneal application of clodronate liposomes or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS) liposomes in C57BL/6 J mice for 4 weeks. GL261 cells were administered at the end of week 2 and animals were sacrificed 2 weeks later. c Representative immunohistochemistry of F4/80+ cells in sections from tumors obtained from C57BL/6 J mice treated with clodronate liposomes or PBS liposomes. Scale bar: 50 μm. d Tumor volume of vector and SETDB1 overexpression tumors from clodronate-liposome or PBS-liposome-treated mice (n = 6 per group). e Tumor weight of vector and SETDB1 overexpression tumors from clodronate-liposome or PBS-liposome-treated mice (n = 6 per group). g The body weight of mice of indicated groups. h A working model of how SETDB1 regulates TAMs recruitment and tumor growth in glioblastoma