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Publication : Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells promote neovascularization in glioma by disrupting the blood-brain barrier.

First Author  Huang Y Year  2014
Journal  Cancer Res Volume  74
Issue  4 Pages  1011-21
PubMed ID  24371228 Mgi Jnum  J:208165
Mgi Id  MGI:5561187 Doi  10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-13-1072
Citation  Huang Y, et al. (2014) Oligodendrocyte progenitor cells promote neovascularization in glioma by disrupting the blood-brain barrier. Cancer Res 74(4):1011-21
abstractText  Enhanced platelet-derived growth factor (PDGF) signaling in glioma drives its development and progression. In this study, we define a unique role for stroma-derived PDGF signaling in maintaining tumor homeostasis within the glioma microenvironment. Large numbers of PDGF receptor-alpha (PDGFRalpha)-expressing stromal cells derived from oligodendrocytes progenitor cells (OPC) were discovered at the invasive front of high-grade gliomas, in which they exhibited a unique perivascular distribution. In PDGFRalpha-deficient host mice, in which orthotopic Gl261 tumors displayed reduced outgrowth, we found that tumor-associated blood vessels displayed smaller lumens and normalized vascular morphology, with tumors in host animals injected with the vascular imaging agent gadolinium also being enhanced less avidly by MRI. Notably, glioma-associated OPC promoted endothelial sprouting and tubule formation, in part by abrogating the inhibitory effect that perivascular astrocytes exert on vascular endothelial conjunctions. Stromal-derived PDGF-CC was crucial for the recruitment and activation of OPC, insofar as mice genetically deficient in PDGF-CC phenocopied the glioma/vascular defects observed in PDGFRalpha-deficient mice. Clinically, we showed that higher levels of PDGF-CC in glioma specimens were associated with more rapid disease recurrence and poorer overall survival. Our findings define a PDGFRalpha/PDGF-CC signaling axis within the glioma stromal microenvironment that contributes to vascular remodeling and aberrant tumor angiogenesis in the brain.
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