Frontiers in Oncology (May 2020)
Effects of BMPER, CXCL10, and HOXA9 on Neovascularization During Early-Growth Stage of Primary High-Grade Glioma and Their Corresponding MRI Biomarkers
Abstract
Neovascularization is required in high-grade glioma (HGG). The objective of this study was to explore neovascularization-related genes and their corresponding MRI biomarkers during the early-growth stage of HGG. Tumor tissues from 30 HGG patients underwent perfusion MRI scanning prior to surgery were used to establish orthotopic xenograft models, pathologically analyze the tumor vasculature and perform transcriptome sequencing. The cases were divided into two groups based on whether the xenograft was successfully established. Microvascular density and BMPER, CXCL10, and HOXA9 expression of surgical specimens in the xenograft-forming group was significantly elevated and the microvascular diameter was significantly reduced, in vitro inhibition of BMPER, CXCL10, or HOXA9 in the glioma stem cell significantly suppressed its tube formation abilities. The in vivo experiment showed that BMPER was highly expressed in the early tumor growth phase (20 days), CXCL10 and HOXA9 expression was elevated with tumor progress, and spatially associated with tumor vasculature. Perfusion weighted MRI (PWI-MRI) derived parameters, rCBV, rCBF, Ktrans, and Vp, were also increased in the xenograft-forming group. In conclusion BMPER, CXCL10, and HOXA9 promote early tumor growth and progression by stimulating neovascularization of primary HGG. The rCBV, rCBF, Ktrans, and Vp can be used as imaging biomarkers to predict the expression statuses of these genes.
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