Institute of Clinical Science, Imperial College London
Doi
Abstract
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) are the most aggressive and devastating tumours of the brain
and are essentially incurable. They are defined by diffuse invasion of the surrounding brain
parenchyma along preexisting structures like the vasculature. Glioma stem cells (GSC) are
thought to be largely responsible for tumour recurrence following treatment due to their high
resistance to therapy, their ability to recapitulate tumours from single cells and their marked
invasive potential.
Here we show, that normal neural stem cell in the subventricular zone are compartmentalised
by endothelial ephrinB2 and their proliferation limited through activation of p53 in an Eph
signalling dependent manner. GSCs however evade both compartmentalisation and proliferation
inhibition and are able to invade perivascularly. Intravital imaging, coupled with
mechanistic studies in vitro revealed that upregulation of ephrinB2 in highly aggressive, mesenchymal
GSCs enables escape from endothelial compartmentalisation through homotypic
forward signalling.
Surprisingly we also find that that ephrinB2 reverse signalling promotes tumourigenesis by
mediating anchorage-independent cytokinesis through activation of RhoA. In preclinical models
using human GSCs we show, that inhibition of ephrinB2 by RNA silencing or with
ephrinB2-blocking antibodies strongly suppresses tumourigenesis of established glioblastoma
by inducing cell-cycle arrest and blocking GBM/vascular interactions. Thus, ephrinB2 is an
oncogene and represents an attractive candidate for anti-GBM therapies aimed at eradicating
the GSC compartment by targeting both glioma invasion and proliferation.Open Acces