The phenotypes of proliferating glioblastoma cells reside on a single axis of variation

L Wang, H Babikir, S Müller, G Yagnik, K Shamardani… - Cancer discovery, 2019 - AACR
L Wang, H Babikir, S Müller, G Yagnik, K Shamardani, F Catalan, G Kohanbash, B Alvarado…
Cancer discovery, 2019AACR
Although tumor-propagating cells can be derived from glioblastomas (GBM) of the proneural
and mesenchymal subtypes, a glioma stem-like cell (GSC) of the classic subtype has not
been identified. It is unclear whether mesenchymal GSCs (mGSC) and/or proneural GSCs
(pGSC) alone are sufficient to generate the heterogeneity observed in GBM. We performed
single-cell/single-nucleus RNA sequencing of 28 gliomas, and single-cell ATAC sequencing
for 8 cases. We found that GBM GSCs reside on a single axis of variation, ranging from …
Abstract
Although tumor-propagating cells can be derived from glioblastomas (GBM) of the proneural and mesenchymal subtypes, a glioma stem-like cell (GSC) of the classic subtype has not been identified. It is unclear whether mesenchymal GSCs (mGSC) and/or proneural GSCs (pGSC) alone are sufficient to generate the heterogeneity observed in GBM. We performed single-cell/single-nucleus RNA sequencing of 28 gliomas, and single-cell ATAC sequencing for 8 cases. We found that GBM GSCs reside on a single axis of variation, ranging from proneural to mesenchymal. In silico lineage tracing using both transcriptomics and genetics supports mGSCs as the progenitors of pGSCs. Dual inhibition of pGSC-enriched and mGSC-enriched growth and survival pathways provides a more complete treatment than combinations targeting one GSC phenotype alone. This study sheds light on a long-standing debate regarding lineage relationships among GSCs and presents a paradigm by which personalized combination therapies can be derived from single-cell RNA signatures, to overcome intratumor heterogeneity.
Significance
Tumor-propagating cells can be derived from mesenchymal and proneural glioblastomas. However, a stem cell of the classic subtype has yet to be demonstrated. We show that classic-subtype gliomas are comprised of proneural and mesenchymal cells. This study sheds light on a long-standing debate regarding lineage relationships between glioma cell types.
See related commentary by Fine, p. 1650.
This article is highlighted in the In This Issue feature, p. 1631
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