Abstract

Patients with aggressive brain tumors, named glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), have a poor prognoses. Here we explored if the ER stress/unfolded protein response (UPR) is involved in the pathophysiology of GBM and may provide novel therapeutic targets. Immunohistochemical analyses of a tissue microarray containing primary GBM specimens showed strong variability in expression of the UPR markers GRP78/BiP, XBP1, and ATF4. Interestingly, high ATF4 expression was associated with poor overall survival suggesting involvement of PERK signaling in GBM progression. In vitro experiments using patient-derived neurospheres, enriched for GBM stem cells (GSCs), showed high sensitivity for the ER stressor thapsigargin (Tg) mainly via PERK signaling. In contrast, neurospheres-derived differentiated GBM cells were less sensitive likely due to lower UPR activity as indicated by comparative transcriptional profiling. Tg and Tunicamycin strongly reduced neurosphere forming ability of GSCs that was linked with potent PERK-dependent downregulation of SOX2 protein. Interestingly, SOX2 downregulation occurred directly via PERK, not requiring downstream activation of the PERK-UPR pathway. Moreover, PERK inactivation resulted in aberrant serum-induced differentiation of GBM neurospheres accompanied by persistent SOX2 expression, delayed upregulation of GFAP and reduced cell adherence. In conclusion, we provide evidence that PERK signaling contributes to the prognoses of primary GBM patients and identified PERK as a novel regulator of SOX2 expression and GSC differentiation. The role of PERK appeared to be pleiotropic involving UPR-dependent, as well as novel identified noncanonical mechanisms regulating SOX2. ER stress and PERK modulation appear to provide promising therapeutic targets for therapy in GBM.

Highlights

  • Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most prevalent and lethal brain tumor in adults[1]

  • BiP/GRP78 was frequently co-expressed with activating transcription factor 4 (ATF4) with a significant correlation factor of 0.217 and ATF4 and X-box binding protein 1 (XBP1) expression were positively correlated with a significant correlation factor of 0.203 (Supplementary Table 1)

  • Low ATF4 expression correlated with prolonged overall survival (OS), whereas BiP/GRP78 and XBP1 expression did not correlate with OS (Fig. 1b)

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Summary

Introduction

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most prevalent and lethal brain tumor in adults[1]. Tg treatment activated the UPR as indicated by strong induction of BiP/GRP78 in all GBM neurospheres at both a low (1 μM) and higher dose Tg (IC50) (Fig. 2d).

Results
Conclusion
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