Selective calcium sensitivity in immature glioma cancer stem cells

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Abstract

Tumor-initiating cells are a subpopulation in aggressive cancers that exhibit traits shared with stem cells, including the ability to self-renew and differentiate, commonly referred to as stemness. In addition, such cells are resistant to chemoand radiation therapy posing a therapeutic challenge. To uncover stemnessassociated functions in glioma-initiating cells (GICs), transcriptome profiles were compared to neural stem cells (NSCs) and gene ontology analysis identified an enrichment of Ca2+ signaling genes in NSCs and the more stem-like (NSCproximal) GICs. Functional analysis in a set of different GIC lines regarding sensitivity to disturbed homeostasis using A23187 and Thapsigargin, revealed that NSC-proximal GICs were more sensitive, corroborating the transcriptome data. Furthermore, Ca2+ drug sensitivity was reduced in GICs after differentiation, with most potent effect in the NSC-proximal GIC, supporting a stemness-associated Ca2+ sensitivity. NSCs and the NSC-proximal GIC line expressed a larger number of ion channels permeable to potassium, sodium and Ca2+. Conversely, a higher number of and higher expression levels of Ca2+ binding genes that may buffer Ca2+, were expressed in NSC-distal GICs. In particular, expression of the AMPA glutamate receptor subunit GRIA1, was found to associate with Ca2+ sensitive NSC-proximal GICs, and decreased as GICs differentiated along with reduced Ca2+ drug sensitivity. The correlation between high expression of Ca2+ channels (such as GRIA1) and sensitivity to Ca2+ drugs was confirmed in an additional nine novel GIC lines. Calcium drug sensitivity also correlated with expression of the NSC markers nestin (NES) and FABP7 (BLBP, brain lipid-binding protein) in this extended analysis. In summary, NSC-associated NES+/FABP7+/GRIA1+ GICs were selectively sensitive to disturbances in Ca2+ homeostasis, providing a potential target mechanism for eradication of an immature population of malignant cells.

Figures

  • Fig. 2. Ca2+ provoker and buffer expression in NSC-proximal and NSC-distal GIC lines. Analysis of expression of Ca2+ provokers such as one of the permeable glutamate receptor subunits GRIA1 (A) or Ca2+ buffer S100A6 (B), ranked the 3 GIC lines (GliNS1 and G166NS, n55 each. G179NS, n52.) according to Ca2+ drug sensitivity, with glutamate channels, such as GRIA1, predicting higher sensitivity and buffer expression predicting lower sensitivity (***p,0.001; Unpaired two-tailed t-test). (C) Western blot analysis showed GRIA1 and S100A6 protein expression, with b-actin as loading control. (D) Protein expression levels of GRIA1 were expressed as percentage fold change when compared against to GliNS1 (n53) and (E) S100A6 protein expression levels were expressed as percentage fold change when compared against G166NS (n53) (***p,0.001; **p,0.01, *p,0.05 One-way ANOVA).
  • Fig. 3. Sensitivity to drugs targeting Ca2+ homeostasis follows GIC transcriptome rank order relative to NSCs. (A) Dose response analysis (0.01– 40 mM) of the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 and (B) the SERCA Ca2+ pump inhibitor Thapsigargin showed that Ca2+ drug sensitivity rank ordered with transcriptome similarity to NSCs, with highest sensitivity in the NSC-proximal GICs. NSC proximal GIC was more sensitive to (C) 40 mM A23187 and (D) 0.156 mM Thapsigargin treatments as compared to the NSC distal lines (*p,0.05; Unpaired two-tailed t-test). NSC-proximal GICs n53 and NSC-distal GICs n54.
  • Fig. 4. Decreased sensitivity to A23187 during GIC differentiation correlating with decrease in GRIA1 expression. (A) RNA sequencing transcriptome mapping followed by principal component analysis verified segregation between undifferentiated and differentiated GICs (GliNS1, G179NS and G166NS). Right panel shows immunofluorescent stainings of the differentiation markers GFAP (red) and Tuj1 (green) upon FBS treatment. (B) Comparison of GRIA1 expression levels in undifferentiated and differentiated GICs (n56) revealed a reduction in fold change in GRIA1 expression upon serum-induced differentiation in all GIC lines. (***p,0.001; Unpaired two-tailed t-test). (C) Cell viability analysis of relative sensitivity to the Ca2+ ionophore A23187 after differentiation showed increased viability upon differentiation of the NSC-proximal GIC line GliNS1 (*p,0.05; Unpaired two-tailed t-test).
  • Fig. 6. Gene expression correlating with high Ca2+ sensitivity in 9 GIC lines. (A) A correlation analysis of genome wide mRNA expression (microarray analysis) and sensitivity to Thapsigargin (1 uM) in 9 additional GIC lines, retrieved 785 genes correlating with Ca2+ drug sensitivity. Gene enrichment and ontology analyses identified involvement of genes affecting proliferation, oxygen and RNA metabolism, catabolism and Ca2+-mediated signaling. (B) 385 genes positively correlating with high sensitivity were filtered first for genes also expressed higher in the NSC-proximal GIC line GliNS1 and thereafter also being downregulated in this line upon differentiation, which was found to reduce Ca2+ drug sensitivity, retrieving a set of nine genes, including the AMPA receptor coding GRIA1.

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Wee, S., Niklasson, M., Marinescu, V. D., Segerman, A., Schmidt, L., Hermansson, A., … Quinones-Hinojosa, A. (2014). Selective calcium sensitivity in immature glioma cancer stem cells. PLoS ONE, 9(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0115698

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