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Suh, Pann-Ghill
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Impact of phospholipase C beta 1 in glioblastoma: a study on the main mechanisms of tumor aggressiveness

Author(s)
Ratti, StefanoMarvi, Maria VittoriaMongiorgi, SaraObeng, Eric OwusuRusciano, IsabellaRamazzotti, GiuliaMorandi, LucaAsioli, SofiaZoli, MatteoMazzatenta, DiegoSuh, Pann-GhillManzoli, LuciaCocco, Lucio
Issued Date
2022-04
DOI
10.1007/s00018-022-04198-1
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/61153
Fulltext
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s00018-022-04198-1
Citation
CELLULAR AND MOLECULAR LIFE SCIENCES, v.79, no.4, pp.195
Abstract
Glioblastoma represents the most lethal brain tumor in adults. Several studies have shown the key role of phospholipase C beta 1 (PLC beta 1) in the regulation of many mechanisms within the central nervous system suggesting PLC beta 1 as a novel signature gene in the molecular classification of high-grade gliomas. This study aims to determine the pathological impact of PLC beta 1 in glioblastoma, confirming that PLC beta 1 gene expression correlates with glioma's grade, and it is lower in 50 glioblastoma samples compared to 20 healthy individuals. PLC beta 1 silencing in cell lines and primary astrocytes, leads to increased cell migration and invasion, with the increment of mesenchymal transcription factors and markers, as Slug and N-Cadherin and metalloproteinases. Cell proliferation, through increased Ki-67 expression, and the main survival pathways, as beta-catenin, ERK1/2 and Stat3 pathways, are also affected by PLC beta 1 silencing. These data suggest a potential role of PLC beta 1 in maintaining a normal or less aggressive glioma phenotype.
Publisher
SPRINGER BASEL AG
ISSN
1420-682X
Keyword (Author)
PhosphoinositidesBrain cancerGliomaPatientsCellular signalingBiomarkers
Keyword
CENTRAL-NERVOUS-SYSTEMEXTRACELLULAR-MATRIXMULTIFORMEACTIVATIONMIGRATIONPATHWAYSGENECLASSIFICATIONPROLIFERATIONEXPRESSION

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