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SeminarPast EventNeuroscience

Neuron-glial interactions in health and disease: from cognition to cancer

Michelle Monje

Prof

Stanford Medicine

Schedule
Tuesday, March 14, 2023

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Schedule

Tuesday, March 14, 2023

2:00 PM Europe/Lisbon

Host: Brain-Body Interactions

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Event Information

Domain

Neuroscience

Original Event

View source

Host

Brain-Body Interactions

Duration

70 minutes

Abstract

In the central nervous system, neuronal activity is a critical regulator of development and plasticity. Activity-dependent proliferation of healthy glial progenitors, oligodendrocyte precursor cells (OPCs), and the consequent generation of new oligodendrocytes contributes to adaptive myelination. This plasticity of myelin tunes neural circuit function and contributes to healthy cognition. The robust mitogenic effect of neuronal activity on normal oligodendroglial precursor cells, a putative cellular origin for many forms of glioma, suggests that dysregulated or “hijacked” mechanisms of myelin plasticity might similarly promote malignant cell proliferation in this devastating group of brain cancers. Indeed, neuronal activity promotes progression of both high-grade and low-grade glioma subtypes in preclinical models. Crucial mechanisms mediating activity-regulated glioma growth include paracrine secretion of BDNF and the synaptic protein neuroligin-3 (NLGN3). NLGN3 induces multiple oncogenic signaling pathways in the cancer cell, and also promotes glutamatergic synapse formation between neurons and glioma cells. Glioma cells integrate into neural circuits synaptically through neuron-to-glioma synapses, and electrically through potassium-evoked currents that are amplified through gap-junctional coupling between tumor cells This synaptic and electrical integration of glioma into neural circuits is central to tumor progression in preclinical models. Thus, neuron-glial interactions not only modulate neural circuit structure and function in the healthy brain, but paracrine and synaptic neuron-glioma interactions also play important roles in the pathogenesis of glial cancers. The mechanistic parallels between normal and malignant neuron-glial interactions underscores the extent to which mechanisms of neurodevelopment and plasticity are subverted by malignant gliomas, and the importance of understanding the neuroscience of cancer.

Topics

BDNFcancer progressiongliomamyelinationneural circuitsneuroligin-3neuron-glial interactionsoligodendrocyte precursor cellssynaptic integration

About the Speaker

Michelle Monje

Prof

Stanford Medicine

Contact & Resources

Personal Website

med.stanford.edu/monje-lab.html

@michelle_monje

Follow on Twitter/X

twitter.com/michelle_monje

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