Neoplasia: An International Journal for Oncology Research (Jun 2022)

Phenotypic and molecular states of IDH1 mutation-induced CD24-positive glioma stem-like cells

  • Sara Haddock,
  • Tyler J. Alban,
  • Şevin Turcan,
  • Hana Husic,
  • Eric Rosiek,
  • Xiaoxiao Ma,
  • Yuxiang Wang,
  • Tejus Bale,
  • Alexis Desrichard,
  • Vladimir Makarov,
  • Sebastien Monette,
  • Wei Wu,
  • Rui Gardner,
  • Katia Manova,
  • Adrienne Boire,
  • Timothy A. Chan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 28
p. 100790

Abstract

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Mutations in IDH1 and IDH2 drive the development of gliomas. These genetic alterations promote tumor cell renewal, disrupt differentiation states, and induce stem-like properties. Understanding how this phenotypic reprogramming occurs remains an area of high interest in glioma research. Previously, we showed that IDH mutation results in the development of a CD24-positive cell population in gliomas. Here, we demonstrate that this CD24-positive population possesses striking stem-like properties at the molecular and phenotypic levels. We found that CD24 expression is associated with stem-like features in IDH-mutant tumors, a patient-derived gliomasphere model, and a neural stem cell model of IDH1-mutant glioma. In orthotopic models, CD24-positive cells display enhanced tumor initiating potency compared to CD24-negative cells. Furthermore, CD24 knockdown results in changes in cell viability, proliferation rate, and gene expression that closely resemble a CD24-negative phenotype. Our data demonstrate that induction of a CD24-positive population is one mechanism by which IDH-mutant tumors acquire stem-like properties. These findings have significant implications for our understanding of the molecular underpinnings of IDH-mutant gliomas.

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