Gliomagenesis mimics an injury response orchestrated by neural crest-like cells.
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Abstract
Glioblastoma is an incurable brain malignancy. By the time of clinical diagnosis, these tumours exhibit a degree of genetic and cellular heterogeneity that provides few clues to the mechanisms that initiate and drive gliomagenesis1,2. Here, to explore the early steps in gliomagenesis, we utilized conditional gene deletion and lineage tracing in tumour mouse models, coupled with serial magnetic resonance imaging, to initiate and then closely track tumour formation. We isolated labelled and unlabelled cells at multiple stages-before the first visible abnormality, at the time of the first visible lesion, and then through the stages of tumour growth-and subjected cells of each stage to single-cell profiling. We identify a malignant cell state with a neural crest-like gene expression signature that is highly abundant in the early stages, but relatively diminished in the late stage of tumour growth. Genomic analysis based on the presence of copy number alterations suggests that these neural crest-like states exist as part of a heterogeneous clonal hierarchy that evolves with tumour growth. By exploring the injury response in wounded normal mouse brains, we identify cells with a similar signature that emerge following injury and then disappear over time, suggesting that activation of an injury response program occurs during tumorigenesis. Indeed, our experiments reveal a non-malignant injury-like microenvironment that is initiated in the brain following oncogene activation in cerebral precursor cells. Collectively, our findings provide insight into the early stages of glioblastoma, identifying a unique cell state and an injury response program tied to early tumour formation. These findings have implications for glioblastoma therapies and raise new possibilities for early diagnosis and prevention of disease.
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Acknowledgements: This research study was supported by funding from the Canadian Institute of Health Research, provided by the Government of Canada, with supplemental support from the Ontario Institute for Cancer Research through funding provided by the Government of Ontario. A.A.H. was supported by an Ontario Trillium award from the University of Toronto and the Province of Ontario, Canada. We thank the Hospital for Sick Children Foundation, Jessica’s Footprint, the Bresler Family, Hopeful Minds Foundation and B.R.A.I.N. Child for ongoing support. We also thank O. Subedar, G. Casallo, W. Foltz, R. Jandric, M. Wong, B. Gibson, G. Yearwood and D. Sutton for technical support.
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1476-4687

