Abstract

Abstract To thrive, glioma cells exploit pathways that are active in normal CNS cells, as well as in normal neurotransmitter signaling. In healthy excitatory synapses the postsynaptic submembrane space consists of multiprotein complexes called the postsynaptic density (PSD). The PSD is responsible for the structural organization, the functioning, and the regulation of neuronal signaling. The five MAGUK Proteins DLG4, DLG1, Magi2, Shank1, and Homer1 are part of the healthy PSD complex and play a crucial role not only in NMDA and AMPA receptor signaling. Investigating the role of these MAGUK proteins in glioma biology could bring further insight into which principal neurobiological features, including organization in communicating networks, are recapitulated by tumor cells of different stages in gliomas. qPCR was used to determine expression levels of DLG4, DLG1, Magi2, Shank1, and Homer1 in 7 different glioma groups (GII, GIII, primary GBM before and after chemotherapy, secondary glioblastoma recurrence with and without chemotherapy). Western Blot was done for DLG4, DLG1, and Homer1. Immunohistochemical staining of frozen sections, paraffin sections and in vitro cells was performed. The expression levels of DLG4, DLG1, Magi2, Shank1, and Homer1 were reduced especially in high grade glioma compared to control tissue. A tendency of decreasing protein levels with increasing malignancy is visible for the majority of proteins. In cell culture all proteins were also present. siRNA experiments are ongoing. The presence of these synaptic proteins in glioma tissue and moreover also primary cell culture could indicate a role in tumor biology and the connection of glioma cells with neuronal tissue.

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