Stem Cell Reports (Feb 2020)

Adult Human Glioblastomas Harbor Radial Glia-like Cells

  • Rong Wang,
  • Roshan Sharma,
  • Xiaojuan Shen,
  • Ashley M. Laughney,
  • Kosuke Funato,
  • Philip J. Clark,
  • Monika Shpokayte,
  • Peter Morgenstern,
  • Monalisa Navare,
  • Yichi Xu,
  • Shaghayegh Harbi,
  • Ignas Masilionis,
  • Gouri Nanjangud,
  • Yanhong Yang,
  • Gabriel Duran-Rehbein,
  • Martin Hemberg,
  • Dana Pe'er,
  • Viviane Tabar

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 2
pp. 338 – 350

Abstract

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Summary: Radial glia (RG) cells are the first neural stem cells to appear during embryonic development. Adult human glioblastomas harbor a subpopulation of RG-like cells with typical RG morphology and markers. The cells exhibit the classic and unique mitotic behavior of normal RG in a cell-autonomous manner. Single-cell RNA sequencing analyses of glioblastoma cells reveal transcriptionally dynamic clusters of RG-like cells that share the profiles of normal human fetal radial glia and that reside in quiescent and cycling states. Functional assays show a role for interleukin in triggering exit from dormancy into active cycling, suggesting a role for inflammation in tumor progression. These data are consistent with the possibility of persistence of RG into adulthood and their involvement in tumor initiation or maintenance. They also provide a putative cellular basis for the persistence of normal developmental programs in adult tumors. : Tabar and colleagues report that adult brain tumors comprise neoplastic radial glia-like cells reminiscent of normal radial glia of early development. They are responsive to inflammation signals and may represent putative stem cells of origin of this lethal tumor. Keywords: radial glia, cancer stem cells, glioblastoma, inflammation, brain tumor, scRNASeq, tumor mitosis