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Xenografts

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xenografts

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2 curated items2 Seminars
Updated 7 months ago
2 items · xenografts
2 results
SeminarNeuroscience

The cellular phase of Alzheimer’s Disease and the path towards therapies

Bart De Strooper
VIB @ University of Leuven / UKDRI @ University College London
May 15, 2025
SeminarNeuroscience

Malignant synaptic plasticity in pediatric high-grade gliomas

Kathryn Taylor
Stanford
May 24, 2022

Pediatric high-grade gliomas (pHGG) are a devastating group of diseases that urgently require novel therapeutic options. We have previously demonstrated that pHGGs directly synapse onto neurons and the subsequent tumor cell depolarization, mediated by calcium-permeable AMPA channels, promotes their proliferation. The regulatory mechanisms governing these postsynaptic connections are unknown. Here, we investigated the role of BDNF-TrkB signaling in modulating the plasticity of the malignant synapse. BDNF ligand activation of its canonical receptor, TrkB (which is encoded for by the gene NTRK2), has been shown to be one important modulator of synaptic regulation in the normal setting. Electrophysiological recordings of glioma cell membrane properties, in response to acute neurotransmitter stimulation, demonstrate in an inward current resembling AMPA receptor (AMPAR) mediated excitatory neurotransmission. Extracellular BDNF increases the amplitude of this glutamate-induced tumor cell depolarization and this effect is abrogated in NTRK2 knockout glioma cells. Upon examining tumor cell excitability using in situ calcium imaging, we found that BDNF increases the intensity of glutamate-evoked calcium transients in GCaMP6s expressing glioma cells. Western blot analysis indicates the tumors AMPAR properties are altered downstream of BDNF induced TrkB activation in glioma. Cell membrane protein capture (via biotinylation) and live imaging of pH sensitive GFP-tagged AMPAR subunits demonstrate an increase of calcium permeable channels at the tumors postsynaptic membrane in response to BDNF. We find that BDNF-TrkB signaling promotes neuron-to-glioma synaptogenesis as measured by high-resolution confocal and electron microscopy in culture and tumor xenografts. Our analysis of published pHGG transcriptomic datasets, together with brain slice conditioned medium experiments in culture, indicates the tumor microenvironment as the chief source of BDNF ligand. Disruption of the BDNF-TrkB pathway in patient-derived orthotopic glioma xenograft models, both genetically and pharmacologically, results in an increased overall survival and reduced tumor proliferation rate. These findings suggest that gliomas leverage normal mechanisms of plasticity to modulate the excitatory channels involved in synaptic neurotransmission and they reveal the potential to target the regulatory components of glioma circuit dynamics as a therapeutic strategy for these lethal cancers.