Literature DB >> 34856994

Peripheral blood RNAseq links neutrophilic inflammation to clinical glioma metastasis.

Yuanyuan Wu1, Zhichao Fan2.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Keywords:  Circulating tumor cells; Gliomas; Neutrophil extracellular traps; Neutrophils

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34856994      PMCID: PMC8641233          DOI: 10.1186/s12916-021-02174-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Med        ISSN: 1741-7015            Impact factor:   8.775


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Background

Glioma is the most common intracranial tumor, representing about 60% of all brain tumors, and show varying degrees of malignancy [1]. Gliomas have a poor prognosis and can cause markedly high mortality. Tragically, glioblastoma (GBM), the most common glioma disease, reduces 5-year relative survival rate to ∼5% [2]. Thus, the mechanistic study of gliomas has vital clinical significance.

CTCs and CTC clusters

Liquid biopsies from cancer patients can enhance prognosis prediction and treatment accuracy. Many risk factors have been examined as potential contributors to glioma risk, and these studies offer new insights into the diagnostic and therapeutic strategies to suppress cancer metastasis. Analysis of circulating tumor cells (CTCs), which are highly efficient metastatic precursors, is reported to be a promising method to study the mechanisms of tumor cell dissemination and metastasis formation [3, 4]. CTCs can be found in the blood of cancer patients as single cells or as CTC clusters. While research on glioma CTCs has been slow compared with other tumor types, more attention has been paid recently. First shown to be present in GBM in 2018, CTC clusters ranging from 2 to 23 cells were present at multiple sampling time points in a GBM patient with pleomorphism and extensive necrosis throughout disease progression [5].

hTERT helps identifying postoperative CTCs as a poor prognosis factor

The paper presented by Zhang et al. [6] provides a more sensitive CTC measurement than the conventional CellSearch method. Their method, which is based on human telomerase reverse transcriptase (hTERT) detection, revealed new mechanisms between CTCs and innate immunity, especially pathways of neutrophil activation and neutrophil extracellular traps in gliomas. The hTRET detection method is a cell-surface marker-independent technology. It uses telomerase-specific, replication-selective oncolytic herpes simplex virus-1 to target telomerase reverse transcriptase-positive cancer cells and label them with green fluorescent protein, enabling identification of viable CTCs from a broad spectrum of malignancies [7]. Using this method, Zhang et al. found that postoperative CTCs are a poor prognosis factor, while preoperative CTCs are not, which refines our former understanding of glioma CTCs [6].

RNAseq links postoperative CTCs with neutrophil inflammation

Understanding mechanisms of metastasis not only involves CTCs but also their interactions with circulating immune cells. Another recent study used single-cell RNAseq to find that cooperation between neutrophils in the immune system and CTCs in the blood of patients with breast cancer can promote CTC proliferation and metastasis [8]. According to this new mechanism, the innate immune system may cooperate to drive tumor progression [9]. By analyzing RNAseq data of peripheral leukocytes in glioma patients, Zhang et al. further demonstrated that postoperative CTCs might stimulate peripheral innate immune responses by activating neutrophils and generating neutrophil extracellular traps (NETs), exhibiting increased cell cycle and DNA replication programs [6]. On the other hand, postoperative CTCs were negatively correlated with the cytotoxic response [6]. This is the first study on the correlation between macro-immunity and CTCs in glioma patients. This finding may provide new ideas for targeted systemic immunomodulatory therapy in patients with gliomas and an opportunity to reduce their spread.

Conclusions

While these studies have established the high diagnostic value of glioma CTCs, the precise detection of glioma CTCs is challenging because of physiological features such as circulation dynamics and the lack of consistently expressed tumor markers [10]. Besides, CTCs remain a limited exhibition of the metastatic process due to their dilution in patients’ blood and the challenge to isolate them [5]. Therefore, omnipresent and specific markers of glioma CTCs in blood should be pursued in future research. Although neutrophil-mediated inflammatory responses correlate with postoperative CTCs and prognosis in GBM, more mechanistic studies are needed to identify potential molecular targets that reveal new insights for GBM treatment.
  10 in total

Review 1.  Metabolomic signature of brain cancer.

Authors:  Renu Pandey; Laura Caflisch; Alessia Lodi; Andrew J Brenner; Stefano Tiziani
Journal:  Mol Carcinog       Date:  2017-07-17       Impact factor: 4.784

2.  Partners in Crime: Neutrophil-CTC Collusion in Metastasis.

Authors:  Bingqian Guo; Trudy G Oliver
Journal:  Trends Immunol       Date:  2019-05-15       Impact factor: 16.687

Review 3.  The epidemiology of glioma in adults: a "state of the science" review.

Authors:  Quinn T Ostrom; Luc Bauchet; Faith G Davis; Isabelle Deltour; James L Fisher; Chelsea Eastman Langer; Melike Pekmezci; Judith A Schwartzbaum; Michelle C Turner; Kyle M Walsh; Margaret R Wrensch; Jill S Barnholtz-Sloan
Journal:  Neuro Oncol       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 12.300

4.  Relevance of CTC Clusters in Breast Cancer Metastasis.

Authors:  Roberto Piñeiro; Inés Martínez-Pena; Rafael López-López
Journal:  Adv Exp Med Biol       Date:  2020       Impact factor: 2.622

5.  Neutrophils escort circulating tumour cells to enable cell cycle progression.

Authors:  Barbara Maria Szczerba; Francesc Castro-Giner; Marcus Vetter; Ilona Krol; Sofia Gkountela; Julia Landin; Manuel C Scheidmann; Cinzia Donato; Ramona Scherrer; Jochen Singer; Christian Beisel; Christian Kurzeder; Viola Heinzelmann-Schwarz; Christoph Rochlitz; Walter Paul Weber; Niko Beerenwinkel; Nicola Aceto
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2019-02-06       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Detection of circulating tumour cell clusters in human glioblastoma.

Authors:  Ilona Krol; Francesc Castro-Giner; Martina Maurer; Sofia Gkountela; Barbara Maria Szczerba; Ramona Scherrer; Niamh Coleman; Suzanne Carreira; Felix Bachmann; Stephanie Anderson; Marc Engelhardt; Heidi Lane; Thomas Ronald Jeffry Evans; Ruth Plummer; Rebecca Kristeleit; Juanita Lopez; Nicola Aceto
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2018-08-01       Impact factor: 9.075

7.  Capture and Detection of Circulating Glioma Cells Using the Recombinant VAR2CSA Malaria Protein.

Authors:  Sara R Bang-Christensen; Rasmus S Pedersen; Marina A Pereira; Thomas M Clausen; Caroline Løppke; Nicolai T Sand; Theresa D Ahrens; Amalie M Jørgensen; Yi Chieh Lim; Louise Goksøyr; Swati Choudhary; Tobias Gustavsson; Robert Dagil; Mads Daugaard; Adam F Sander; Mathias H Torp; Max Søgaard; Thor G Theander; Olga Østrup; Ulrik Lassen; Petra Hamerlik; Ali Salanti; Mette Ø Agerbæk
Journal:  Cells       Date:  2019-08-28       Impact factor: 6.600

8.  Circulating tumor cell clusters are oligoclonal precursors of breast cancer metastasis.

Authors:  Nicola Aceto; Aditya Bardia; David T Miyamoto; Maria C Donaldson; Ben S Wittner; Joel A Spencer; Min Yu; Adam Pely; Amanda Engstrom; Huili Zhu; Brian W Brannigan; Ravi Kapur; Shannon L Stott; Toshi Shioda; Sridhar Ramaswamy; David T Ting; Charles P Lin; Mehmet Toner; Daniel A Haber; Shyamala Maheswaran
Journal:  Cell       Date:  2014-08-28       Impact factor: 41.582

9.  Tumor-selective replication herpes simplex virus-based technology significantly improves clinical detection and prognostication of viable circulating tumor cells.

Authors:  Wen Zhang; Li Bao; Shaoxing Yang; Zhaoyang Qian; Mei Dong; Liyuan Yin; Qian Zhao; Keli Ge; Zhenling Deng; Jing Zhang; Fei Qi; Zhongxue An; Yuan Yu; Qingbo Wang; Renhua Wu; Fan Fan; Lianfeng Zhang; Xiping Chen; Yingjian Na; Lin Feng; Lingling Liu; Yujie Zhu; Tiancheng Qin; Shuren Zhang; Youhui Zhang; Xiuqing Zhang; Jian Wang; Xin Yi; Liqun Zou; Hong-Wu Xin; Henrik J Ditzel; Hongjun Gao; Kaitai Zhang; Binlei Liu; Shujun Cheng
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2016-06-28
  10 in total

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