Article (Scientific journals)
Glioblastomas are composed of genetically divergent clones with distinct tumourigenic potential and variable stem cell-associated phenotypes.
Stieber, Daniel; Golebiewska, Anna; Evers, Lisa et al.
2014In Acta Neuropathologica, 127 (2), p. 203-19
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Keywords :
Animals; Biopsy; Carcinogenesis/genetics/pathology; Cell Line, Tumor; Central Nervous System Neoplasms/genetics/pathology; DNA Copy Number Variations/genetics; DNA, Neoplasm/genetics; Flow Cytometry; Glioblastoma/genetics/pathology; Heterografts; Humans; Mice; Mice, Inbred NOD; Mice, SCID; Neoplastic Stem Cells/pathology; Phenotype; Ploidies; Retrospective Studies; Single-Cell Analysis
Abstract :
[en] Glioblastoma (GBM) is known to be a heterogeneous disease; however, the genetic composition of the cells within a given tumour is only poorly explored. In the advent of personalised medicine the understanding of intra-tumoural heterogeneity at the cellular and the genetic level is mandatory to improve treatment and clinical outcome. By combining ploidy-based flow sorting with array-comparative genomic hybridization we show that primary GBMs present as either mono- or polygenomic tumours (64 versus 36%, respectively). Monogenomic tumours were limited to a pseudodiploid tumour clone admixed with normal stromal cells, whereas polygenomic tumours contained multiple tumour clones, yet always including a pseudodiploid population. Interestingly, pseudodiploid and aneuploid fractions carried the same aberrations as defined by identical chromosomal breakpoints, suggesting that evolution towards aneuploidy is a late event in GBM development. Interestingly, while clonal heterogeneity could be recapitulated in spheroid-based xenografts, we find that genetically distinct clones displayed different tumourigenic potential. Moreover, we show that putative cancer stem cell markers including CD133, CD15, A2B5 and CD44 were present on genetically distinct tumour cell populations. These data reveal the clonal heterogeneity of GBMs at the level of DNA content, tumourigenic potential and stem cell marker expression, which is likely to impact glioma progression and treatment response. The combined knowledge of intra-tumour heterogeneity at the genetic, cellular and functional level is crucial to assess treatment responses and to design personalized treatment strategies for primary GBM.
Disciplines :
Oncology
Author, co-author :
Stieber, Daniel
Golebiewska, Anna
Evers, Lisa
Lenkiewicz, Elizabeth
Brons, Nicolaas H. C.
Nicot, Nathalie
Oudin, Anais
Bougnaud, Sebastien
Hertel, Frank ;  University of Luxembourg > Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB)
Bjerkvig, Rolf
Vallar, Laurent
Barrett, Michael T.
More authors (3 more) Less
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
Glioblastomas are composed of genetically divergent clones with distinct tumourigenic potential and variable stem cell-associated phenotypes.
Publication date :
2014
Journal title :
Acta Neuropathologica
ISSN :
1432-0533
Publisher :
Springer, Germany
Volume :
127
Issue :
2
Pages :
203-19
Peer reviewed :
Peer Reviewed verified by ORBi
Available on ORBilu :
since 17 January 2018

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