c-Met signaling induces a reprogramming network and supports the glioblastoma stem-like phenotype

The tyrosine kinase c-Met promotes the formation and malignant progression of multiple cancers. It is well known that c-Met hyperactivation increases tumorigenicity and tumor cell resistance to DNA damaging agents, properties associated with tumor-initiating stem cells. However, a link between c-Met...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2011-06, Vol.108 (24), p.9951-9956
Hauptverfasser: Li, Yunqing, Li, Angela, Glas, Martin, Lal, Bachchu, Ying, Mingyao, Sang, Yingying, Xia, Shuli, Trageser, Daniel, Guerrero-Cázares, Hugo, Eberhart, Charles G., Quiñones-Hinojosa, Alfredo, Scheffler, Bjorn, Laterra, John
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The tyrosine kinase c-Met promotes the formation and malignant progression of multiple cancers. It is well known that c-Met hyperactivation increases tumorigenicity and tumor cell resistance to DNA damaging agents, properties associated with tumor-initiating stem cells. However, a link between c-Met signaling and the formation and/or maintenance of neoplastic stem cells has not been previously identified. Here, we show that c-Met is activated and functional in glioblastoma (GBM) neurospheres enriched for glioblastoma tumor-initiating stem cells and that c-Met expression/function correlates with stem cell marker expression and the neoplastic stem cell phenotype in glioblastoma neurospheres and clinical glioblastoma specimens. c-Met activation was found to induce the expression of reprogramming transcription factors (RFs) known to support embryonic stem cells and induce differentiated cells to form pluripotent stem (iPS) cells, and c-Met activation counteracted the effects of forced differentiation in glioblastoma neurospheres. Expression of the reprogramming transcription factor Nanog by glioblastoma cells is shown to mediate the ability of c-Met to induce the stem cell characteristics of neurosphere formation and neurosphere cell self-renewal. These findings show that c-Met enhances the population of glioblastoma stem cells (GBM SCs) via a mechanism requiring Nanog and potentially other c-Met-responsive reprogramming transcription factors.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1016912108