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Publication : Remote neuronal activity drives glioma progression through SEMA4F.

First Author  Huang-Hobbs E Year  2023
Journal  Nature Volume  619
Issue  7971 Pages  844-850
PubMed ID  37380778 Mgi Jnum  J:340085
Mgi Id  MGI:7525792 Doi  10.1038/s41586-023-06267-2
Citation  Huang-Hobbs E, et al. (2023) Remote neuronal activity drives glioma progression through SEMA4F. Nature 619(7971):844-850
abstractText  The tumour microenvironment plays an essential role in malignancy, and neurons have emerged as a key component of the tumour microenvironment that promotes tumourigenesis across a host of cancers(1,2). Recent studies on glioblastoma (GBM) highlight bidirectional signalling between tumours and neurons that propagates a vicious cycle of proliferation, synaptic integration and brain hyperactivity(3-8); however, the identity of neuronal subtypes and tumour subpopulations driving this phenomenon is incompletely understood. Here we show that callosal projection neurons located in the hemisphere contralateral to primary GBM tumours promote progression and widespread infiltration. Using this platform to examine GBM infiltration, we identified an activity-dependent infiltrating population present at the leading edge of mouse and human tumours that is enriched for axon guidance genes. High-throughput, in vivo screening of these genes identified SEMA4F as a key regulator of tumourigenesis and activity-dependent progression. Furthermore, SEMA4F promotes the activity-dependent infiltrating population and propagates bidirectional signalling with neurons by remodelling tumour-adjacent synapses towards brain network hyperactivity. Collectively our studies demonstrate that subsets of neurons in locations remote to primary GBM promote malignant progression, and also show new mechanisms of glioma progression that are regulated by neuronal activity.
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