A Novel, Diffusely Infiltrative Xenograft Model of Human Anaplastic Oligodendroglioma with Mutations in FUBP1, CIC, and IDH1

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Barbara Klink - , Institute of Clinical Genetics (Author)
  • Hrvoje Miletic - , University of Bergen (Author)
  • Daniel Stieber - , Luxembourg Institute of Health (Author)
  • Peter C. Huszthy - , University of Bergen, University of Rijeka (Author)
  • Jaime Alberto Campos Valenzuela - , Institute for Medical Informatics and Biometry (Author)
  • Jörg Balss - , German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ) (Author)
  • Jian Wang - , University of Bergen (Author)
  • Manja Schubert - , Haukeland universitets­sjukehus (Author)
  • Per Øystein Sakariassen - , University of Bergen (Author)
  • Terje Sundstrøm - , University of Bergen, Haukeland universitets­sjukehus (Author)
  • Anja Torsvik - , University of Bergen (Author)
  • Mads Aarhus - , University of Oslo (Author)
  • Rupavathana Mahesparan - , Haukeland universitets­sjukehus (Author)
  • Andreas von Deimling - , German Cancer Research Center (DKFZ), Heidelberg University  (Author)
  • Lars Kaderali - , Institute for Medical Informatics and Biometry (Author)
  • Simone P. Niclou - , Luxembourg Institute of Health (Author)
  • Evelin Schröck - , Institute of Clinical Genetics (Author)
  • Rolf Bjerkvig - , University of Bergen, Luxembourg Institute of Health (Author)
  • Janice M. Nigro - , University of Bergen (Author)

Abstract

Oligodendroglioma poses a biological conundrum for malignant adult human gliomas: it is a tumor type that is universally incurable for patients, and yet, only a few of the human tumors have been established as cell populations in vitro or as intracranial xenografts in vivo. Their survival, thus, may emerge only within a specific environmental context. To determine the fate of human oligodendroglioma in an experimental model, we studied the development of an anaplastic tumor after intracranial implantation into enhanced green fluorescent protein (eGFP) positive NOD/SCID mice. Remarkably after nearly nine months, the tumor not only engrafted, but it also retained classic histological and genetic features of human oligodendroglioma, in particular cells with a clear cytoplasm, showing an infiltrative growth pattern, and harboring mutations of IDH1 (R132H) and of the tumor suppressor genes, FUBP1 and CIC. The xenografts were highly invasive, exhibiting a distinct migration and growth pattern around neurons, especially in the hippocampus, and following white matter tracts of the corpus callosum with tumor cells accumulating around established vasculature. Although tumors exhibited a high growth fraction in vivo, neither cells from the original patient tumor nor the xenograft exhibited significant growth in vitro over a six-month period. This glioma xenograft is the first to display a pure oligodendroglioma histology and expression of R132H. The unexpected property, that the cells fail to grow in vitro even after passage through the mouse, allows us to uniquely investigate the relationship of this oligodendroglioma with the in vivo microenvironment.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article numbere59773
JournalPloS one
Volume8
Issue number3
Publication statusPublished - 19 Mar 2013
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 23527265

Keywords

ASJC Scopus subject areas