Abstract
There is increasing evidence demonstrating that adult neural stem cells (NSCs) are a cell of origin of glioblastoma. Here we analyzed the interaction between transformed and wild-type NSCs isolated from the adult mouse subventricular zone niche. We found that transformed NSCs are refractory to quiescence-inducing signals. Unexpectedly, we also demonstrated that these cells induce quiescence in surrounding wild-type NSCs in a cell-cell contact and Notch signaling-dependent manner. Our findings therefore suggest that oncogenic mutations are propagated in the stem cell niche not just through cell-intrinsic advantages, but also by outcompeting neighboring stem cells through repression of their proliferation.
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Lawlor, K., Marques-Torrejon, M. A., Dharmalingham, G., El-Azhar, Y., Schneider, M. D., Pollard, S. M., & Rodríguez, T. A. (2020). Glioblastoma stem cells induce quiescence in surrounding neural stem cells via notch signaling. Genes and Development, 34(23–24), 1599–1604. https://doi.org/10.1101/gad.336917.120
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