Abstract
Brain tumors comprise over 100 types of masses, differing in the following: location; patient age; molecular, histological, and immunohistochemical characteristics; and prognosis and treatment. Glioma tumors originate from neuroglia, cells supporting the brain. Palladin, a structural protein widely expressed in mammalian tissues, has a pivotal role in cytoskeletal dynamics and motility in health and disease. Palladin is linked to the progression of breast, pancreatic, and renal cancers. In the central nervous system, palladin is involved in embryonic development, neuronal maturation, the cell cycle, differentiation, and apoptosis. However, the role of palladin in brain tumors is unknown. In this work, we explored palladin’s role in glioma. We analyzed clinical data, along with bulk and single-cell gene expression. We then validated our results using IHC staining of tumor samples, together with qRT-PCR of glioma cell lines. We determined that wild-type palladin-4 is overexpressed in adult gliomas and is correlated with a decrease in survival. Palladin expression outperformed clinically used prognostic markers and was most prominent in glioblastoma. Finally, we showed that palladin originates from the malignant cell population. Our findings indicate that palladin expression might be linked to adult glioma progression and is associated with prognosis.
Funder
Israel Science Foundation
Tel Aviv University Center for Combating Pandemics
Horizon 2020—Research and Innovation Framework Programme
The Edmond J. Safra Center for Bioinformatics at Tel Aviv University
The Koret-UC Berkeley-Tel Aviv University Initiative in Computational Biology and Bioinformatics
The QBI/UCSF-Tel Aviv University joint Initiative in Computational Biology and Drug Discovery
Israeli Ministry of Defense, Office of Assistant Minister of Defense for Chemical, Biological, Radiological and Nuclear (CBRN) Defense
Foundation Fighting Blindness
Collaborative clinical Bioinformatics research of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Bioinformatics and Faculty of Medicine at Tel Aviv University
Tel Aviv University Healthy Longevity Research Center
Djerassi-Elias Institute of Oncology
Canada-Montreal Friends of Tel Aviv University
Donations from Harold H. Marcus, Amy Friedkin, Natalio Garber, Tal Zohar
Kirschman Dvora Eleonora Fund for Parkinson's Disease
Joint funding between Tel Aviv University and Yonsei University
Tel Aviv University Innovation Laboratories