Abstract

A transmembrane protein CD133 has been implicated as a marker of stem-like glioma cells and predictor for therapeutic response in malignant brain tumours. CD133 expression is commonly evaluated by using antibodies specific for the AC133 epitope located in one of the extracellular domains of membrane-bound CD133. There is conflicting evidence regarding the significance of the AC133 epitope as a marker for identifying stem-like glioma cells and predicting the degree of malignancy in glioma cells. The reasons for discrepant results between different studies addressing the role of CD133/AC133 in gliomas are unclear. A possible source for controversies about CD133/AC133 is the widespread assumption that expression patterns of the AC133 epitope reflect linearly those of the CD133 protein. Consequently, the readouts from AC133 assessments are often interpreted in terms of the CD133 protein. The purpose of this study is to determine whether and to what extent do the readouts obtained with anti-AC133 antibody correspond to the level of CD133 protein expressed in stem-like glioma cells. Our study reveals for the first time that CD133 expressed on the surface of glioma cells is poorly immunoreactive for AC133. Furthermore, we provide evidence that the level of CD133 occupancy on the surface of glioma cells fluctuates during the cell cycle. Our results offer a new explanation for numerous inconsistencies regarding the biological and clinical significance of CD133/AC133 in human gliomas and call for caution in interpreting the lack or presence of AC133 epitope in glioma cells.

Highlights

  • A transmembrane protein CD133 is expressed in hematopoietic and neural stem cells (NSCs) [1, 2] and glioma stem-like cells (GSCs) [3, 4]

  • The results showed that both antiAC133 and anti-CD133CT Abs detect one common band migrating with an apparent molecular weight corresponding to CD133

  • This study describes the first identification of GSCs that do express CD133 protein but lack immunoreactivity for antibody CD133/1 (AC133)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A transmembrane protein CD133 ( known as prominin-1) is expressed in hematopoietic and neural stem cells (NSCs) [1, 2] and glioma stem-like cells (GSCs) [3, 4]. Several lines of evidence suggest a link between the surface expression of CD133 and tumorigenicity of glioma cells. One study, in which evaluation of CD133 levels was independent from the AC133 epitope, found an inverse correlation between CD133 expression and GBM aggressiveness [16]. The reasons for these discrepant results remain unclear and the need for clarification of existing controversies has been repeatedly emphasized [26,27,28,29]

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call