P04.04 Regulation of glioma cell invasion by 3q26 gene products PIK3CA, SOX2 and OPA1

Abstract Background Diffuse gliomas progress by invading neighboring brain tissue to promote post-operative relapse. Transcription factor gene SOX2 is highly expressed in invasive gliomas and maps to 3q26 together with the genes for the PI3K/AKT signaling activator PIK3CA, and those encoding effecto...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuro-oncology (Charlottesville, Va.) Va.), 2018-09, Vol.20 (suppl_3), p.iii278-iii279
Hauptverfasser: Leu, S, Ramadoss, A, Schaefer, T, Tintignac, L, Tostado, C, Bink, A, Moffa, G, Demougin, P, Moes, S, Mariani, L, Boulay, J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background Diffuse gliomas progress by invading neighboring brain tissue to promote post-operative relapse. Transcription factor gene SOX2 is highly expressed in invasive gliomas and maps to 3q26 together with the genes for the PI3K/AKT signaling activator PIK3CA, and those encoding effectors of mitochondria fusion and cell invasion inhibitors MFN1 and OPA1. Material and Methods We aimed at investigating their respective roles in glioma cell invasion in vitro and by exploiting retrospective patient neuro-imaging data. Results Gene copy number analysis at 3q26 from 129 glioma patient biopsies revealed mutually exclusive SOX2amplifications (26%) and OPA1losses (19%). Both forced SOX2expression and OPA1inactivation increased LN319 glioma cell invasion. Conversely, pharmacological PI3K/AKT pathway inhibition decreased invasion and resulted in SOX2 nucleus-to-cytoplasm translocation in a mTORC1-independent manner, showing that PI3K/AKT signaling sustains SOX2 activity. Chromatin immuno-precipitation and luciferase reporter gene assays together demonstrated that SOX2 trans-activates PIK3CAandOPA1. Thus, SOX2 activates PI3K/AKT signaling in a positive feedback loop, while OPA1 deletion is interpreted to counter-act OPA1 trans-activation. Remarkably, neuro-imaging of human gliomas with high SOX2or low OPA1genomic imbalances revealed significantly larger necrotic tumor zone volumes, corresponding to higher invasive capacities of tumors. Whereas glioma invasion is activated by a PI3K/AKT-SOX2 loop, it is reduced by a cryptic invasion suppressor SOX2-OPA1 pathway. Conclusion RTK/PI3K/AKT-SOX2 and mitochondria fission represent potential signaling networks to be targeted to control glioma invasion. In addition, our results indicate that necrosis volume is a potential surrogate marker for evaluation of invasion.
ISSN:1522-8517
1523-5866
DOI:10.1093/neuonc/noy139.238