Abstract
Background
Tumor cells recapitulate cell-lineage transcriptional programs that are characteristic of normal tissues from which they arise. It is unclear why such lineage programs are fatefully maintained in tumors and if they contribute to cell proliferation and viability. Methods
Here, we used the most common brain tumor, meningioma, which is strongly associated with female gender and high body mass index (BMI), as a model system to address these questions. We screened expression profiling data to identify the transcription factor (TF) genes which are highly enriched in meningioma, and characterized the expression pattern of those TFs and downstream genes in clinical meningioma samples as well as normal brain tissues. Meningioma patient-derived cell lines (PDCLs) were used for further validation and characterization. Results
We identified eight TFs highly-enriched in meningioma. Expression of these TFs, which included SIX1, readily distinguished meningiomas from other primary brain tumors and was maintained in PDCLs and even in pulmonary meningothelial nodules. In meningioma PDCL, SIX1 and its co-activator EYA2, supported the expression of the leptin receptor (LEPR), the cell-surface receptor for leptin (LEP), the adipose-specific hormone that is high in women and in individuals with high BMI. Notably, these transcriptional regulatory factors, LEPR and LEP all contributed to support meningioma PDCL proliferation and survival, elucidating a survival dependency on both a core transcriptional program and a metabolic cell-surface receptor. Conclusions
These findings provide one rationale for why lineage TF expression is maintained in meningioma and for the epidemiological association of female gender and obesity with meningioma risk.from #ORL-AlexandrosSfakianakis via ola Kala on Inoreader https://ift.tt/2HAWlXj
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