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  • A mouse model for embryonal tumors with multilayered rosettes uncovers the therapeutic potential of Sonic-hedgehog inhibitors (Julia E. Neumann, Annika K. Wefers, Sander Lambo, Edoardo Bianchi, Marie Bockstaller, Mario M. Dorostkar, Valerie Meister, Pia Schindler, Andrey Korshunov, Katja von Hoff, Johannes Nowak, Monika Warmuth-Metz, Marlon R. Schneider, Ingrid Renner-Müller, Daniel J. Merk, Mehdi Shakarami, Tanvi Sharma, Lukas Chavez, Rainer Glass, Jennifer A. Chan, M. Mark Taketo, Philipp Neumann, Marcel Kool, Ulrich Schüller), In Nature Medicine, Series: 23(10), pp. 1191–1202, Nature Publishing Group, ISSN: 1546-170X, 2017-09-11
    Publication detailsDOI

Abstract

Embryonal tumors with multilayered rosettes (ETMRs) have recently been described as a new entity of rare pediatric brain tumors with a fatal outcome. We show here that ETMRs are characterized by a parallel activation of Shh and Wnt signaling. Co-activation of these pathways in mouse neural precursors is sufficient to induce ETMR-like tumors in vivo that resemble their human counterparts on the basis of histology and global gene-expression analyses, and that point to apical radial glia cells as the possible tumor cell of origin. Overexpression of LIN28A, which is a hallmark of human ETMRs, augments Sonic-hedgehog (Shh) and Wnt signaling in these precursor cells through the downregulation of let7-miRNA, and LIN28A/let7a interaction with the Shh pathway was detected at the level of Gli mRNA. Finally, human ETMR cells that were transplanted into immunocompromised host mice were responsive to the SHH inhibitor arsenic trioxide (ATO). Our work provides a novel mouse model in which to study this tumor type, demonstrates the driving role of Wnt and Shh activation in the growth of ETMRs and proposes downstream inhibition of Shh signaling as a therapeutic option for patients with ETMRs.

BibTeX

@article{AMMFETWMRU17,
	author	 = {Julia E. Neumann and Annika K. Wefers and Sander Lambo and Edoardo Bianchi and Marie Bockstaller and Mario M. Dorostkar and Valerie Meister and Pia Schindler and Andrey Korshunov and Katja von Hoff and Johannes Nowak and Monika Warmuth-Metz and Marlon R. Schneider and Ingrid Renner-Müller and Daniel J. Merk and Mehdi Shakarami and Tanvi Sharma and Lukas Chavez and Rainer Glass and Jennifer A. Chan and M. Mark Taketo and Philipp Neumann and Marcel Kool and Ulrich Schüller},
	title	 = {{A mouse model for embryonal tumors with multilayered rosettes uncovers the therapeutic potential of Sonic-hedgehog inhibitors}},
	year	 = {2017},
	month	 = {09},
	publisher	 = {Nature Publishing Group},
	journal	 = {Nature Medicine},
	series	 = {23(10)},
	pages	 = {1191--1202},
	issn	 = {1546-170X},
	doi	 = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nm.4402},
	abstract	 = {Embryonal tumors with multilayered rosettes (ETMRs) have recently been described as a new entity of rare pediatric brain tumors with a fatal outcome. We show here that ETMRs are characterized by a parallel activation of Shh and Wnt signaling. Co-activation of these pathways in mouse neural precursors is sufficient to induce ETMR-like tumors in vivo that resemble their human counterparts on the basis of histology and global gene-expression analyses, and that point to apical radial glia cells as the possible tumor cell of origin. Overexpression of LIN28A, which is a hallmark of human ETMRs, augments Sonic-hedgehog (Shh) and Wnt signaling in these precursor cells through the downregulation of let7-miRNA, and LIN28A/let7a interaction with the Shh pathway was detected at the level of Gli mRNA. Finally, human ETMR cells that were transplanted into immunocompromised host mice were responsive to the SHH inhibitor arsenic trioxide (ATO). Our work provides a novel mouse model in which to study this tumor type, demonstrates the driving role of Wnt and Shh activation in the growth of ETMRs and proposes downstream inhibition of Shh signaling as a therapeutic option for patients with ETMRs.},
}

publication.txt · Last modified: 2019-01-23 10:26 by 127.0.0.1

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