Chronophin is a glial tumor modifier involved in the regulation of glioblastoma growth and invasiveness
Glioblastoma is the most aggressive primary brain tumor in adults. Although the rapid recurrence of glioblastomas after treatment is a major clinical challenge, the relationships between tumor growth and intracerebral spread remain poorly understood. We have identified the cofilin phosphatase chrono...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Oncogene 2016-06, Vol.35 (24), p.3163-3177 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Glioblastoma is the most aggressive primary brain tumor in adults. Although the rapid recurrence of glioblastomas after treatment is a major clinical challenge, the relationships between tumor growth and intracerebral spread remain poorly understood. We have identified the cofilin phosphatase chronophin (gene name: pyridoxal phosphatase,
PDXP
) as a glial tumor modifier. Monoallelic
PDXP
loss was frequent in four independent human astrocytic tumor cohorts and increased with tumor grade. We found that aberrant
PDXP
promoter methylation can be a mechanism leading to further chronophin downregulation in glioblastomas, which correlated with shorter glioblastoma patient survival. Moreover, we observed an inverse association between chronophin protein expression and cofilin phosphorylation levels in glioma tissue samples. Chronophin-deficient glioblastoma cells showed elevated cofilin phosphorylation, an increase in polymerized actin, a higher directionality of cell migration, and elevated
in vitro
invasiveness. Tumor growth of chronophin-depleted glioblastoma cells xenografted into the immunodeficient mouse brain was strongly impaired. Our study suggests a mechanism whereby the genetic and epigenetic alterations of
PDXP
resulting in altered chronophin expression may regulate the interplay between glioma cell proliferation and invasion. |
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ISSN: | 0950-9232 1476-5594 |
DOI: | 10.1038/onc.2015.376 |