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Effect of brain- and tumor-derived connective tissue growth factor on glioma invasion.


ABSTRACT:

Background

Tumor cell invasion is the principal cause of treatment failure and death among patients with malignant gliomas. Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) has been previously implicated in cancer metastasis and invasion in various tumors. We explored the mechanism of CTGF-mediated glioma cell infiltration and examined potential therapeutic targets.

Methods

Highly infiltrative patient-derived glioma tumor-initiating or tumor stem cells (TIC/TSCs) were harvested and used to explore a CTGF-induced signal transduction pathway via luciferase reporter assays, chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP), real-time polymerase chain reaction, and immunoblotting. Treatment of TIC/TSCs with small-molecule inhibitors targeting integrin ?1 (ITGB1) and the tyrosine kinase receptor type A (TrkA), and short hairpin RNAs targeting CTGF directly were used to reduce the levels of key protein components of CTGF-induced cancer infiltration. TIC/TSC infiltration was examined in real-time cell migration and invasion assays in vitro and by immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization in TIC/TSC orthotopic xenograft mouse models (n = 30; six mice per group). All statistical tests were two-sided.

Results

Treatment of TIC/TSCs with CTGF resulted in CTGF binding to ITGB1-TrkA receptor complexes and nuclear factor kappa B (NF-?B) transcriptional activation as measured by luciferase reporter assays (mean relative luciferase activity, untreated vs CTGF(200 ng/mL): 0.53 vs 1.87, difference = 1.34, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 0.69 to 2, P < .001). NF-?B activation resulted in binding of ZEB-1 to the E-cadherin promoter as demonstrated by ChIP analysis with subsequent E-cadherin suppression (fold increase in ZEB-1 binding to the E-cadherin promoter region: untreated + ZEB-1 antibody vs CTGF(200 ng/mL) + ZEB-1 antibody: 1.5 vs 6.4, difference = 4.9, 95% CI = 4.8 to 5.0, P < .001). Immunohistochemistry and in situ hybridization revealed that TrkA is selectively expressed in the most infiltrative glioma cells in situ and that the surrounding reactive astrocytes secrete CTGF.

Conclusion

A CTGF-rich microenvironment facilitates CTGF-ITGB1-TrkA complex activation in TIC/TSCs, thereby increasing the invasiveness of malignant gliomas.

SUBMITTER: Edwards LA 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC3149042 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Effect of brain- and tumor-derived connective tissue growth factor on glioma invasion.

Edwards Lincoln A LA   Woolard Kevin K   Son Myung Jin MJ   Li Aiguo A   Lee Jeongwu J   Ene Chibawanye C   Mantey Samuel A SA   Maric Dragan D   Song Hua H   Belova Galina G   Jensen Robert T RT   Zhang Wei W   Fine Howard A HA  

Journal of the National Cancer Institute 20110719 15


<h4>Background</h4>Tumor cell invasion is the principal cause of treatment failure and death among patients with malignant gliomas. Connective tissue growth factor (CTGF) has been previously implicated in cancer metastasis and invasion in various tumors. We explored the mechanism of CTGF-mediated glioma cell infiltration and examined potential therapeutic targets.<h4>Methods</h4>Highly infiltrative patient-derived glioma tumor-initiating or tumor stem cells (TIC/TSCs) were harvested and used to  ...[more]

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