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Bone morphogenetic protein-7 release from endogenous neural precursor cells suppresses the tumourigenicity of stem-like glioblastoma cells
Author(s) -
Sridhar Reddy Chirasani,
Alexander Sternjak,
Peter Wend,
Stefan Momma,
Benito Campos,
Ilaria M. Herrmann,
Daniel Graf,
Thimios A. Mitsiadis,
Christel HeroldMende,
Daniel Besser,
Michael Synowitz,
Helmut Kettenmann,
Rainer Glaß
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
brain
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.142
H-Index - 336
eISSN - 1460-2156
pISSN - 0006-8950
DOI - 10.1093/brain/awq128
Subject(s) - neurosphere , bone morphogenetic protein , bone morphogenetic protein 5 , stem cell , neural stem cell , bone morphogenetic protein 6 , bone morphogenetic protein 2 , microbiology and biotechnology , paracrine signalling , bone morphogenetic protein 7 , cancer research , biology , bone morphogenetic protein 8a , bone morphogenetic protein 4 , cellular differentiation , adult stem cell , in vitro , biochemistry , receptor , gene
Glioblastoma cells with stem-like properties control brain tumour growth and recurrence. Here, we show that endogenous neural precursor cells perform an anti-tumour response by specifically targeting stem-like brain tumour cells. In vitro, neural precursor cells predominantly express bone morphogenetic protein-7; bone morphogenetic protein-7 is constitutively released from neurospheres and induces canonical bone morphogenetic protein signalling in stem-like glioblastoma cells. Exposure of human and murine stem-like brain tumour cells to neurosphere-derived bone morphogenetic protein-7 induces tumour stem cell differentiation, attenuates stem-like marker expression and reduces self-renewal and the ability for tumour initiation. Neurosphere-derived or recombinant bone morphogenetic protein-7 reduces glioblastoma expansion from stem-like cells by down-regulating the transcription factor Olig2. In vivo, large numbers of bone morphogenetic protein-7-expressing neural precursors encircle brain tumours in young mice, induce canonical bone morphogenetic protein signalling in stem-like glioblastoma cells and can thereby attenuate tumour formation. This anti-tumour response is strongly reduced in older mice. Our results indicate that endogenous neural precursor cells protect the young brain from glioblastoma by releasing bone morphogenetic protein-7, which acts as a paracrine tumour suppressor that represses proliferation, self-renewal and tumour-initiation of stem-like glioblastoma cells.

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