SWIM tool application to expression data of glioblastoma stem-like cell lines, corresponding primary tumors and conventional glioma cell lines
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2018
abstract:
Background:
It is well-known that glioblastoma contains self-renewing, stem-like subpopulation with the ability to
sustain tumor growth. These cells - called cancer stem-like cells - share certain phenotypic characteristics with
untransformed stem cells and are resistant to many conventional cancer therapies, which might explain the limitations
in curing human malignancies. Thus, the identification of genes controlling the differentiation of these stem-like cells
is becoming a successful therapeutic strategy, owing to the promise of novel targets for treating malignancies.
Methods:
Recently, we developed SWIM, a software able to unveil a small pool of genes - called switch genes -
critically associated with drastic changes in cell phenotype. Here, we applied SWIM to the expression profiling of
glioblastoma stem-like cells and conventional glioma cell lines, in order to identify switch genes related to stem-like
phenotype.
Results:
SWIM identifies 171 switch genes that are all down-regulated in glioblastoma stem-like cells. This list
encompasses genes like CAV1, COL5A1, COL6A3, FLNB, HMMR, ITGA3, ITGA5, MET, SDC1, THBS1, and VEGFC, involved
in "ECM-receptor interaction" and "focal adhesion" pathways. The inhibition of switch genes highly correlates with the
activation of genes related to neural development and differentiation, such as the 4-core OLIG2, POU3F2, SALL2,
SOX2, whose induction has been shown to be sufficient to reprogram differentiated glioblastoma into stem-like cells.
Among switch genes, the transcription factor FOSL1 appears as the brightest star since: it is down-regulated in
stem-like cells; it highly negatively correlates with the 4-core genes that are all up-regulated in stem-like cells; the
promoter regions of the 4-core genes harbor a consensus binding motif for FOSL1.
Conclusions:
We suggest that the inhibition of switch genes in stem-like cells could induce the deregulation of cell
communication pathways, contributing to neoplastic progression and tumor invasiveness. Conversely, their activation
could restore the physiological equilibrium between cell adhesion and migration, hampering the progression of
cancer. Moreover, we posit FOSL1 as promising candidate to orchestrate the differentiation of cancer stem-like cells
by repressing the 4-core genes' expression, which severely halts cancer growth and might affect the therapeutic
outcome. We suggest FOSL1 as novel putative therapeutic and prognostic biomarker, worthy of further investigation.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
COMPUTATIONAL AND SYSTEMS BIOLOGY
List of contributors:
Fiscon, Giulia; Conte, Federica; Paci, Paola
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