TY - JOUR
T1 - p120-catenin-dependent collective brain infiltration by glioma cell networks
AU - Gritsenko, Pavlo G.
AU - Atlasy, Nader
AU - Dieteren, Cindy E.J.
AU - Navis, Anna C.
AU - Venhuizen, Jan Hendrik
AU - Veelken, Cornelia
AU - Schubert, Dirk
AU - Acker-Palmer, Amparo
AU - Westerman, Bart A.
AU - Wurdinger, Thomas
AU - Leenders, William
AU - Wesseling, Pieter
AU - Stunnenberg, Hendrik G.
AU - Friedl, Peter
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited.
PY - 2020/1/1
Y1 - 2020/1/1
N2 - Diffuse brain infiltration by glioma cells causes detrimental disease progression, but its multicellular coordination is poorly understood. We show here that glioma cells infiltrate the brain collectively as multicellular networks. Contacts between moving glioma cells are adaptive epithelial-like or filamentous junctions stabilized by N-cadherin, β-catenin and p120-catenin, which undergo kinetic turnover, transmit intercellular calcium transients and mediate directional persistence. Downregulation of p120-catenin compromises cell–cell interaction and communication, disrupts collective networks, and both the cadherin and RhoA binding domains of p120-catenin are required for network formation and migration. Deregulating p120-catenin further prevents diffuse glioma cell infiltration of the mouse brain with marginalized microlesions as the outcome. Transcriptomics analysis has identified p120-catenin as an upstream regulator of neurogenesis and cell cycle pathways and a predictor of poor clinical outcome in glioma patients. Collective glioma networks infiltrating the brain thus depend on adherens junctions dynamics, the targeting of which may offer an unanticipated strategy to halt glioma progression.
AB - Diffuse brain infiltration by glioma cells causes detrimental disease progression, but its multicellular coordination is poorly understood. We show here that glioma cells infiltrate the brain collectively as multicellular networks. Contacts between moving glioma cells are adaptive epithelial-like or filamentous junctions stabilized by N-cadherin, β-catenin and p120-catenin, which undergo kinetic turnover, transmit intercellular calcium transients and mediate directional persistence. Downregulation of p120-catenin compromises cell–cell interaction and communication, disrupts collective networks, and both the cadherin and RhoA binding domains of p120-catenin are required for network formation and migration. Deregulating p120-catenin further prevents diffuse glioma cell infiltration of the mouse brain with marginalized microlesions as the outcome. Transcriptomics analysis has identified p120-catenin as an upstream regulator of neurogenesis and cell cycle pathways and a predictor of poor clinical outcome in glioma patients. Collective glioma networks infiltrating the brain thus depend on adherens junctions dynamics, the targeting of which may offer an unanticipated strategy to halt glioma progression.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85077546068&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41556-019-0443-x
DO - 10.1038/s41556-019-0443-x
M3 - Article
C2 - 31907411
AN - SCOPUS:85077546068
SN - 1465-7392
VL - 22
SP - 97
EP - 107
JO - Nature Cell Biology
JF - Nature Cell Biology
IS - 1
ER -