Primary çjlioblastoma cultures: Can profiling of stem cell markers predict radiotherapy sensitivity?

Lemke D, Weiler M, Blaes J, Wiestler B, Jestaedt L, Klein AC, Loew S, Eisele G, Radlwimmer B, Capper D, Schmieder K, Mittelbronn M, Combs SE, Bendszus M, Weller M, Platten M, Wick W (2014)


Publication Type: Journal article

Publication year: 2014

Journal

Book Volume: 131

Pages Range: 251-264

Journal Issue: 2

DOI: 10.1111/jnc.12802

Abstract

Human glioblastomas may be hierarchically organized. Within this hierarchy, glioblastoma-initiating cells have been proposed to be more resistant to radiochemotherapy and responsible for recurrence. Here, established stem cell markers and stem cell attributed characteristics such as self-renewal capacity and tumorigenicity have been profiled in primary glioblastoma cultures to predict radiosensitivity. Furthermore, the sensitivity to radiotherapy of different subpopulations within a single primary glioblastoma culture was analyzed by a flow cytometric approach using Nestin, SRY (sex-determining region Y)-box 2 (SOX2) and glial fibrillary acidic protein. The protein expression of Nestin and SOX2 as well as themRNAlevels of Musashi1, L1 cell adhesion molecule, CD133, Nestin, and pleiomorphic adenoma gene-like 2 inversely correlated with radioresistance in regard to the clonogenic potential. Only CD44 protein expression correlated positively with radioresistance. In terms of proliferation, Nestin protein expression and Musashi1, pleiomorphic adenoma gene-like 2, and CD133 mRNA levels are inversely correlated with radioresistance. Higher expression of stem cell markers does not correlate with resistance to radiochemotherapy in the cancer genome atlas glioblastoma collective. SOX2 expressing subpopulations exist within single primary glioblastoma cultures. These subpopulations predominantly form the proliferative pool of the primary cultures and are sensitive to irradiation. Thus, profiling of established stem cell markers revealed a surprising result. Except CD44, the tested stem cell markers showed an inverse correlation between expression and radioresistance.

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How to cite

APA:

Lemke, D., Weiler, M., Blaes, J., Wiestler, B., Jestaedt, L., Klein, A.-C.,... Wick, W. (2014). Primary çjlioblastoma cultures: Can profiling of stem cell markers predict radiotherapy sensitivity? Journal of neurochemistry, 131(2), 251-264. https://doi.org/10.1111/jnc.12802

MLA:

Lemke, Dieter, et al. "Primary çjlioblastoma cultures: Can profiling of stem cell markers predict radiotherapy sensitivity?" Journal of neurochemistry 131.2 (2014): 251-264.

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