| Literature DB >> 34059134 |
Sajina Shakya1, Anthony D Gromovsky2, James S Hale2,3, Arnon M Knudsen4,5, Briana Prager6,7, Lisa C Wallace1, Luiz O F Penalva8, H Alex Brown9, Bjarne W Kristensen4,5, Jeremy N Rich10, Justin D Lathia2,3,6, J Mark Brown2,3,6, Christopher G Hubert11,12,13.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) displays marked cellular and metabolic heterogeneity that varies among cellular microenvironments within a tumor. Metabolic targeting has long been advocated as a therapy against many tumors including GBM, but how lipid metabolism is altered to suit different microenvironmental conditions and whether cancer stem cells (CSCs) have altered lipid metabolism are outstanding questions in the field. We interrogated gene expression in separate microenvironments of GBM organoid models that mimic the transition between nutrient-rich and nutrient-poor pseudopalisading/perinecrotic tumor zones using spatial-capture RNA-sequencing. We revealed a striking difference in lipid processing gene expression and total lipid content between diverse cell populations from the same patient, with lipid enrichment in hypoxic organoid cores and also in perinecrotic and pseudopalisading regions of primary patient tumors. This was accompanied by regionally restricted upregulation of hypoxia-inducible lipid droplet-associated (HILPDA) gene expression in organoid cores and pseudopalisading regions of clinical GBM specimens, but not lower-grade brain tumors. CSCs have low lipid droplet accumulation compared to non-CSCs in organoid models and xenograft tumors, and prospectively sorted lipid-low GBM cells are functionally enriched for stem cell activity. Targeted lipidomic analysis of multiple patient-derived models revealed a significant shift in lipid metabolism between GBM CSCs and non-CSCs, suggesting that lipid levels may not be simply a product of the microenvironment but also may be a reflection of cellular state. CSCs had decreased levels of major classes of neutral lipids compared to non-CSCs, but had significantly increased polyunsaturated fatty acid production due to high fatty acid desaturase (FADS1/2) expression which was essential to maintain CSC viability and self-renewal. Our data demonstrate spatially and hierarchically distinct lipid metabolism phenotypes occur clinically in the majority of patients, can be recapitulated in laboratory models, and may represent therapeutic targets for GBM.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer stem cell; Glioblastoma; Lipid droplets; Organoid; Tumor heterogeneity
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34059134 PMCID: PMC8166002 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-021-01205-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1GBM organoids mimic the pathologic transition zones and molecular heterogeneity of GBM patient tumors. A H&E staining of GBM 3D organoids (right panel) reveals histological zones comparable to GBM primary patient tumors (left panel). The perivascular region and hypoxic core in primary patient tumors (left panel) are mimicked by the organoid proliferative rim and hypoxic core regions (right panel), respectively. B To compare the molecular signature of these histological regions, the organoids were stained whole to label the entire outer rim region, and single cells were isolated. C Limiting-dilution assays showed that the organoid proliferative rim is functionally enriched for stem cells compared to the hypoxic core. Calculated stem cell frequencies and 95% confidence intervals are shown. D Upon RNA-seq analysis of single cells, distinct cell-type signatures were found to be enriched within spatially separate niches in the organoids. E Mapping expression in organoids to the regional Ivy GAP database showed region-specific enrichment. Scale bar = 100 µm
Fig. 2Lipid droplet accumulation in perinecrotic and pseudopalisading tumor regions and corresponding GBM organoid cores. A Publicly available databases show that HILPDA is consistently increased in GBM tumors and specifically enriched in hypoxic pseudopalisading cells, which is recapitulated by the organoid core. * p < 0.01; ** p < 0.001; ns, p > 0.05. Lipid droplet staining with Oil Red O shows higher staining in the B organoid core and C pseudopalisading and perinecrotic regions of primary tumors. Scale bar for wide field images = 100 µm and 50 µm for other images. D Pie charts representing the findings in 11 patient tumors and 9 organoids
Fig. 3GBM CSCs and non-CSCs have differential levels of lipid accumulation. A Dissociated cells from GBM PDX models were stained for the stem cell marker CD133 and magnetically sorted. B Oil Red O staining was higher in the cultured non-CSC population than in the CSC population. C The CD133-negative non-CSC population showed increased fluorescence compared to CD133-positive CSCs for both Nile red and BODIPY lipid-specific fluorescent dyes. D Magnetically sorted CSC and non-CSC populations were subsequently FACS sorted into lipid-high and lipid-low populations based on BODIPY fluorescence (top and bottom 20%). Sphere-forming capability was determined by limiting-dilution assay. Non-CSCs showed uniformly low sphere-forming capability. BODIPY-low CSCs had significantly higher self-renewal capacity than their BODIPY-high counterparts (p = 0.002). Calculated stem cell frequencies and 95% confidence intervals are shown
Fig. 4Lipid profiling of GBM stem and non-stem cells show differences in global lipid profiling. A Matched pairs (n = 5) of magnetically sorted CD133-positive CSCs and CD133-negative non-CSCs were pooled and analyzed together for different classes of lipids using mass spectroscopy. GBM CSCs have decreased levels of the neutral lipid species B DAG and C TAG. Specific classes of phospholipids are altered in CSCs vs non-CSCs: D Overall phospholipid distribution and E Distribution of minor phospholipid classes. *p < 0.05
Fig. 5Lipidomic profiling of GBM stem and non-stem cells shows differences in specific lipid species. GBM CSCs and non-CSCs have differentially expressed phospholipid species, with most of the increase in lipid species in non-CSCs. A Phosphatidylserine, B Phosphatidylglycerol, C Phosphatidic acid, D Phosphatidylethanolamine, E Phosphatidylcholine, and F Lysophosphatidylethanolamine species. G Table highlighting statistically significant differences in lipid groups. * p < 0.05; ns, p > 0.05
Fig. 6Fatty acid desaturases are upregulated in CSCs and required for CSC survival. A GBM CSCs and non-CSCs have notable differences in phosphatidylinositol species. In particular, CSCs have reduced arachidonic acid (AA) levels but increased levels of its precursor DGLA. B and C qRT-PCR shows that FADS1 and FADS2 levels are higher in CSCs compared to non-CSCs from PDX models. D and E RNA-seq shows higher expression of FADS1 and FADS2 in cells of the GBM organoid proliferative rim and patient cellular tumor regions. CellTiter-Glo cell viability assay shows decreased viability of GBM cells upon FADS1 (F) or FADS2 (G) knockdown. H Proposed mechanism of high accumulation vs high flux of lipids in GBM non-CSCs and CSCs, respectively. * p < 0.01; ** p < 0.001; *** p < 0.0001