4.7 Article

Tweety-Homolog 1 Drives Brain Colonization of Gliomas

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 37, Issue 29, Pages 6837-6850

Publisher

SOC NEUROSCIENCE
DOI: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.3532-16.2017

Keywords

glioblastoma; glioma; invasion; migration; Ttyh1; tumor microtubes

Categories

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG WI 1930/5-1]
  2. Faculty of Medicine of the Technical University of Munich (Kommission fur Klinische Forschung [KKF])
  3. Hoffmann-Klose Foundation
  4. Helmholtz International Graduate School
  5. Deutsche Krebshilfe [110624]
  6. Central Animal Laboratory of the German Cancer Research Center
  7. Faculty of Medicine of the Technical University of Munich grant of the Kommission fur Klinische Forschung [KKF])
  8. medical faculty of Heidelberg University

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Early and progressive colonization of the healthy brain is one hallmark of diffuse gliomas, including glioblastomas. We recently discovered ultralong (> 10 to hundreds of microns) membrane protrusions [tumor microtubes (TMs)] extended by glioma cells. TMshave been associated with the capacity of glioma cells to effectively invade the brain and proliferate. Moreover, TMs are also used by some tumor cells to interconnect to one large, resistant multicellular network. Here, we performed a correlative gene-expression microarray and in vivo imaging analysis, and identified novel molecular candidates for TM formation and function. Interestingly, these genes were previously linked to normal CNS development. One of the genes scoring highest in tests related to the outgrowth of TMs was tweety-homolog 1 (TTYH1), which was highly expressed in a fraction of TMs in mice and patients. Ttyh1 was confirmed to be a potent regulator of normal TM morphology and of TM-mediated tumor-cell invasion and proliferation. Glioma cells with one or two TMs were mainly responsible for effective brain colonization, and Ttyh1 downregulation particularly affected this cellular subtype, resulting in reduced tumor progression and prolonged survival of mice. The remaining Ttyh1-deficient tumor cells, however, had more interconnecting TMs, which were associated with increased radioresistance in those small tumors. These findings imply a cellular and molecular heterogeneity in gliomas regarding formation and function of distinct TM subtypes, with multiple parallels to neuronal development, and suggest that Ttyh1 might be a promising target to specifically reduce TM-associated brain colonization by glioma cells in patients.

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