Glioma-initiating cells (GICs) are responsible for the initiation and recurrence of gliomas. Here, we identify a molecular mechanism that regulates the self-renewal capacity of patient-derived GICs. We show that TGF-beta and LIF induce the self-renewal capacity and prevent the differentiation of GICs. TGF-beta induces the self-renewal capacity of GICs, but not of normal human neuroprogenitors, through the Smad-dependent induction of LIF and the subsequent activation of the JAK-STAT pathway. The effect of TGF-beta and LIF on GICs promotes oncogenesis in vivo. Some human gliomas express high levels of LIF that correlate with high expression of TGF-beta2 and neuroprogenitor cell markers. Our results show that TGF-beta and LIF have an essential role in the regulation of GICs in human glioblastoma.
TGFbeta acts as a tumor suppressor in normal epithelial cells and early-stage tumors and becomes an oncogenic factor in advanced tumors. The molecular mechanisms involved in the malignant function of TGFbeta are not fully elucidated. We demonstrate that high TGFbeta-Smad activity is present in aggressive, highly proliferative gliomas and confers poor prognosis in patients with glioma. We discern the mechanisms and molecular determinants of the TGFbeta oncogenic response with a transcriptomic approach and by analyzing primary cultured patient-derived gliomas and human glioma biopsies. The TGFbeta-Smad pathway promotes proliferation through the induction of PDGF-B in gliomas with an unmethylated PDGF-B gene. The epigenetic regulation of the PDGF-B gene dictates whether TGFbeta acts as an oncogenic factor inducing PDGF-B and proliferation in human glioma.
Cervical carcinoma (CC) is one of the most common cancers among women worldwide and the first cause of death among the Mexican female population. Human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is the most important etiologic factor for CC. Of the oncogenic types, HPV16 and HPV18 are found in 60-70% of invasive CCs worldwide. HPV18 appears to be associated with a more aggressive form of cervical neoplasia than HPV16 infection. At present, there are no studies on differentially expressed cellular genes between transformed cells harboring HPV16 and HPV18 sequences. Based on previous complementary DNA microarray data from our group, 13 genes were found to be differentially overexpressed between HPV16- and HPV18-transformed cells. These genes were as follows: E6BP, UBE4A, C20orf14, ATF7, ABCC8, SLC6A12, WASF3, SUV39H1, SPAG8, CCNC, E2FFE, BIRC5, and DEDD. Differential expression of six selected genes was confirmed by real-time reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR). All real-time RT-PCRs confirmed differential expression between HPV18 and HPV(-) samples. The present work identifies genes from signaling pathways triggered by HPV transformation that could be differentially deregulated between HPV16(+) and HPV18(+) samples.
We determined differentially expressed genes in HT29 human colon cancer cells, both after short treatment with methotrexate (MTX) and after the resistance to MTX had been established. Screening was performed using Atlas Human Cancer 1.2K cDNA arrays. The analysis was carried out using Atlas image 2.01 and genespring 6.1 software. Among the differentially expressed genes we chose for further validation were inosine monophosphate dehydrogenase type II (IMPDH2), inosine monophosphate cyclohydrolase and survivin as up‐regulated genes, and topoisomerase I (TOP1) and vimentin as down‐regulated genes. Changes in mRNA levels were validated by quantitative RT‐PCR. Additionally, functional analyses were performed inhibiting the products of the selected genes or altering their expression to test if these genes could serve as targets to modify MTX cytotoxicity. Inhibition of IMPDH or TOP1 activity, antisense treatment against survivin, or overexpression of vimentin, sensitized resistant HT29 cells to MTX. Therefore, these proteins could constitute targets to develop modulators in MTX chemotherapy.
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