Translational Oncology (Aug 2021)

Hypoxia-induced phenotypic transition from highly invasive to less invasive tumors in glioma stem-like cells: Significance of CD44 and osteopontin as therapeutic targets in glioblastoma

  • Masahiro Nishikawa,
  • Akihiro Inoue,
  • Takanori Ohnishi,
  • Hajime Yano,
  • Saya Ozaki,
  • Yonehiro Kanemura,
  • Satoshi Suehiro,
  • Yoshihiro Ohtsuka,
  • Shohei Kohno,
  • Shiro Ohue,
  • Seiji Shigekawa,
  • Hideaki Watanabe,
  • Riko Kitazawa,
  • Junya Tanaka,
  • Takeharu Kunieda

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 8
p. 101137

Abstract

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The poor prognosis of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is primarily due to highly invasive glioma stem-like cells (GSCs) in tumors. Upon GBM recurrence, GSCs with highly invasive and highly migratory activities must assume a less-motile state and proliferate to regenerate tumor mass. Elucidating the molecular mechanism underlying this transition from a highly invasive phenotype to a less-invasive, proliferative tumor could facilitate the identification of effective molecular targets for treating GBM. Here, we demonstrate that severe hypoxia (1% O2) upregulates CD44 expression via activation of hypoxia-inducible factor (HIF-1α), inducing GSCs to assume a highly invasive tumor. In contrast, moderate hypoxia (5% O2) upregulates osteopontin expression via activation of HIF-2α. The upregulated osteopontin inhibits CD44-promoted GSC migration and invasion and stimulates GSC proliferation, inducing GSCs to assume a less-invasive, highly proliferative tumor. These data indicate that the GSC phenotype is determined by interaction between CD44 and osteopontin. The expression of both CD44 and osteopontin is regulated by differential hypoxia levels. We found that CD44 knockdown significantly inhibited GSC migration and invasion both in vitro and in vivo. Mouse brain tumors generated from CD44-knockdown GSCs exhibited diminished invasiveness, and the mice survived significantly longer than control mice. In contrast, siRNA-mediated silencing of the osteopontin gene decreased GSC proliferation. These results suggest that interaction between CD44 and osteopontin plays a key role in tumor progression in GBM; inhibition of both CD44 and osteopontin may represent an effective therapeutic approach for suppressing tumor progression, thus resulting in a better prognosis for patients with GBM.

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