Intercellular Cooperation and Competition in Brain Cancers: Lessons From Drosophila and Human Studies

Author:

Waghmare Indrayani1,Roebke Austin2,Minata Mutsuko3,Kango-Singh Madhuri12,Nakano Ichiro34

Affiliation:

1. Center for Tissue Regeneration and Engineering at Dayton (TREND), Department of Biology, University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio, USA

2. PreMedical Programs, University of Dayton, Dayton, Ohio, USA

3. Department of Neurological Surgery The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA

4. James Comprehensive Cancer Center, The Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA

Abstract

Summary Glioblastoma (GBM) is a primary brain cancer with an extremely poor prognosis. GBM tumors contain heterogeneous cellular components, including a small subpopulation of tumor cells termed glioma stem cells (GSCs). GSCs are characterized as chemotherapy- and radiotherapy-resistant cells with prominent tumorigenic ability. Studies in Drosophila cancer models demonstrated that interclonal cooperation and signaling from apoptotic clones provokes aggressive growth of neighboring tumorigenic clones, via compensatory proliferation or apoptosis induced proliferation. Mechanistically, these aggressive tumors depend on activation of Jun-N-terminal kinase (upstream of c-JUN), and Drosophila Wnt (Wg) in the apoptotic clones. Consistent with these nonmammalian studies, data from several mammalian studies have shown that c-JUN and Wnt are hyperactivated in aggressive tumors (including GBM). However, it remains elusive whether compensatory proliferation is an evolutionarily conserved mechanism in cancers. In the present report, we summarize recent studies in Drosophila models and mammalian models (e.g., xenografts of human cancer cells into small animals) to elucidate the intercellular interactions between the apoptosis-prone cancer cells (e.g., non-GSCs) and the hyperproliferative cancer cells (e.g., GSCs). These evolving investigations will yield insights about molecular signaling interactions in the context of post-therapeutic phenotypic changes in human cancers. Furthermore, these studies are likely to revise our understanding of the genetic changes and post-therapeutic cell-cell interactions, which is a vital area of cancer biology with wide applications to many cancer types in humans.

Funder

American Cancer Society

NIH/National Cancer Institute

NIH/National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cell Biology,Developmental Biology,General Medicine

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