Abstract

Neuroblastoma (NB) is a paediatric cancer that arises in the sympathetic nervous system. Patients with stage 4 tumours have poor outcomes and 20% of high-risk cases have MYCN amplification. The bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs) play roles in sympathetic neuritogenesis, by signalling through bone morphogenetic protein receptor (BMPR)2 and either BMPR1A or BMPR1B. Alterations in BMPR2 expression have been reported in NB; it is unknown if the expression of BMPR1A or BMPR1B is altered. We report lower BMPR2 and BMPR1B, and higher BMPR1A, expression in stage 4 and in MYCN-amplified NB. Kaplan–Meier plots showed that high BMPR2 or BMPR1B expression was linked to better survival, while high BMPR1A was linked to worse survival. Gene ontology enrichment and pathway analyses revealed that BMPR2 and BMPR1B co-expressed genes were enriched in those associated with NB differentiation. BMPR1A co-expressed genes were enriched in those associated with cell proliferation. Moreover, the correlation between BMPR2 and BMPR1A was strengthened, while the correlation between BMPR2 and BMPR1B was lost, in MYCN-amplified NB. This suggested that differentiation should decrease BMPR1A and increase BMPR1B expression. In agreement, nerve growth factor treatment of cultured sympathetic neurons decreased Bmpr1a expression and increased Bmpr1b expression. Overexpression of dominant negative BMPR1B, treatment with a BMPR1B inhibitor and treatment with GDF5, which signals via BMPR1B, showed that BMPR1B signalling is required for optimal neuritogenesis in NB cells, suggesting that loss of BMPR1B may alter neuritogenesis. The present study shows that expression of distinct BMPRs is associated with different survival outcomes in NB.

Highlights

  • Neuroblastoma (NB) is a paediatric cancer that arises in the sympathetic nervous system and is responsible for 15% of all pediatric cancer mortality [1]

  • We found that BMPR2 expression was lower in MYCN-amplified NB than in non-MYCN-amplified NB in both data sets (Figure 1C)

  • We examined the expression of the two type 1 bone morphogenetic protein receptor (BMPR), BMPR1A and BMPR1B, which are required for signal transduction following ligand binding to BMPR2

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Summary

Introduction

Neuroblastoma (NB) is a paediatric cancer that arises in the sympathetic nervous system and is responsible for 15% of all pediatric cancer mortality [1]. The International Neuroblastoma Staging System (INSS) classifies NB into stages 1–4 and stage 4s [2]. While the molecular drivers of NB progression are multi-factorial, a whole-genome analysis of 87 NB samples identified frequent alterations in the expression of genes associated with neuritogenesis, in high-risk tumours [3].

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