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An integrative model of cellular states, plasticity and genetics for glioblastoma

Authors :
Daniel P. Cahill
Tracy T. Batchelor
Priscilla K. Brastianos
William T. Curry
Orit Rozenblatt-Rosen
Dennis M. Bonal
John M. DeWitt
Ivan Stamenkovic
Anoop P. Patel
Inder M. Verma
Irene Slavc
Aviv Regev
Ravindra Mylvaganam
René Geyeregger
Mario L. Suvà
Christine M. Hebert
Anat Stemmer-Rachamimov
Julia L. Small
Lisa Mayr
Nicholas Druck
Alexander Kaplan
Simon Gritsch
Sarah Becker
L. Nicolas Gonzalez Castro
David N. Louis
Toshiro Hara
Danielle Dionne
Brian V. Nahed
Rachel L. Servis
Xiaoyang Lan
McKenzie Shaw
Keith L. Ligon
Cyril Neftel
Christopher Rodman
Kristine Pelton
Johannes Gojo
Mariella G. Filbin
Matthew P. Frosch
Esther Rheinbay
Tony Hunter
Michelle Monje
Marni E. Shore
Dana Silverbush
Elizabeth M. Perez
Gilbert J. Rahme
Hiroaki Wakimoto
Jeremy M. Fung
Quang-Dé Nguyen
Itay Tirosh
Maria Martinez-Lage
Julie Laffy
Alyssa R. Richman
Mia Bertalan
Thomas Czech
Christine Haberler
Bradley E. Bernstein
Nicolo Riggi
Bob S. Carter
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biology
Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MIT
Source :
Cell, PMC
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Diverse genetic, epigenetic, and developmental programs drive glioblastoma, an incurable and poorly understood tumor, but their precise characterization remains challenging. Here, we use an integrative approach spanning single-cell RNA-sequencing of 28 tumors, bulk genetic and expression analysis of 401 specimens from the The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA), functional approaches, and single-cell lineage tracing to derive a unified model of cellular states and genetic diversity in glioblastoma. We find that malignant cells in glioblastoma exist in four main cellular states that recapitulate distinct neural cell types, are influenced by the tumor microenvironment, and exhibit plasticity. The relative frequency of cells in each state varies between glioblastoma samples and is influenced by copy number amplifications of the CDK4, EGFR, and PDGFRA loci and by mutations in the NF1 locus, which each favor a defined state. Our work provides a blueprint for glioblastoma, integrating the malignant cell programs, their plasticity, and their modulation by genetic drivers. Single-cell analyses of glioblastoma samples reveal multiple cellular states, their plasticity and the genetic underpinnings of state proportions in a given tumor.<br />National Cancer Institute (U.S.) (Grants 1U24CA180922, R33CA202820, P30CA14051)

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell, PMC
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....85367a06752131d82809bde947d45b2f