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Journal ArticleDOI

Interactions between cancer cells and immune cells drive transitions to mesenchymal-like states in glioblastoma.

TL;DR: In this paper, the mesenchymal subtype of glioblastoma is determined by both cancer cell-intrinsic alterations and extrinsic cellular interactions, but remains poorly understood.
About: This article is published in Cancer Cell.The article was published on 2021-06-14. It has received 166 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Oncostatin M & Tumor microenvironment.
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TL;DR: The diversity of TAMs suggests different possibilities for exploiting particular subsets for therapeutic purposes; as a result, an arsenal of macrophage-targeted agents are currently being tested in the clinic and the inclusion of TAM data in precision oncology molecular tumour boards could become routine practice.

128 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jul 2022-Cell
TL;DR: In this article , the authors demonstrate that whole-brain colonization is fueled by glioblastoma cells that lack connections with other tumor cells and astrocytes yet receive synaptic input from neurons.

90 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Frederick S. Varn, Kevin M. Johnson, Jan Martinek, Jason T. Huse, MacLean Nasrallah, Pieter Wesseling, Lee Cooper, Tathiane M. Malta, Taylor Wade, Thais S. Sabedot, Daniel J. Brat, Peter Gould, Adelheid Wöehrer, Kenneth Aldape, Azzam Ismail, Santhosh Sivajothi, Floris P. Barthel, Hoon-Kyo Kim, Emre Kocakavuk, Nazia Ahmed, Kieron White, Indrani Datta, Hyo Eun Moon, Steven Pollock, Christine N. Goldfarb, Ga Hyun Lee, Luciano Garofano, Kevin W. Anderson, Djamel Nehar-Belaid, Jill S. Barnholtz-Sloan, Spyridon Bakas, Annette T. Byrne, Fulvio D'Angelo, Hui K Gan, Mustafa Khasraw, Simona Migliozzi, D. Ryan Ormond, Sun Ha Paek, Erwin G. Van Meir, Annemiek M E Walenkamp, Colin Watts, Tobias Weiss, Michael Weller, A. Karolina Palucka, Lucy F. Stead, Laila M. Poisson, Houtan Noushmehr, Antonio Iavarone, Roel G.W. Verhaak, Kristin Alfaro, Samirkumar B. Amin, David M. Ashley, Christoph Bock, Andrew Brodbelt, Ketan R. Bulsara, Ana Valeria B Castro, Jennifer Connelly, Joseph F. Costello, John de Groot, G. Finocchiaro, Pim J. French, Anna Golebiewska, Annika Hau, Chibo Hong, Craig Horbinski, Kasthuri Kannan, Mathilde C.M. Kouwenhoven, Anna Lasorella, Peter S. LaViolette, Keith L. Ligon, Allison Lowman, Shwetal Vatsal Mehta, Hrvoje Miletic, Annette M. Molinaro, Ho Keung Ng, Simone P. Niclou, Johanna M. Niers, T. J. Phillips, Raul Rabadan, Ganesh Rao, Guido Reifenberger, Nader Sanai, Susan C Short, Peter A. E. Sillevis Smitt, Andrew E. Sloan, Marion Smits, James M. Snyder, Hiromichi Suzuki, Ghazaleh Tabatabai, Georgette Tanner, William H. Tomaszewski, Michael J. Wells, Bart A. Westerman, Helen Wheeler, Jichun Xie, W. K. Alfred Yung, Gelareh Zadeh, Junfei Zhao 
24 May 2022-Cell
TL;DR: In this paper , RNA and/or DNA sequencing data from the temporally separated tumor pairs of 304 adult patients with isocitrate dehydrogenase (IDH)-wild-type and IDH-mutant glioma were analyzed.

90 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is envisioned that spatial methods will map entire organs and enable next-generation pathology, among many transformative applications, in the developing landscape of in situ spatial genome, transcriptome and proteome technologies.

81 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors characterized glioblastomas by spatially resolved transcriptomics, metabolomics, and proteomics, inferring that these malignant tumors are organized by spatial segregation of lineage states and adapts to inflammatory and/or metabolic stimuli.

80 citations

References
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The addition of temozolomide to radiotherapy for newly diagnosed glioblastoma resulted in a clinically meaningful and statistically significant survival benefit with minimal additional toxicity.
Abstract: methods Patients with newly diagnosed, histologically confirmed glioblastoma were randomly assigned to receive radiotherapy alone (fractionated focal irradiation in daily fractions of 2 Gy given 5 days per week for 6 weeks, for a total of 60 Gy) or radiotherapy plus continuous daily temozolomide (75 mg per square meter of body-surface area per day, 7 days per week from the first to the last day of radiotherapy), followed by six cycles of adjuvant temozolomide (150 to 200 mg per square meter for 5 days during each 28-day cycle). The primary end point was overall survival. results A total of 573 patients from 85 centers underwent randomization. The median age was 56 years, and 84 percent of patients had undergone debulking surgery. At a median follow-up of 28 months, the median survival was 14.6 months with radiotherapy plus temozolomide and 12.1 months with radiotherapy alone. The unadjusted hazard ratio for death in the radiotherapy-plus-temozolomide group was 0.63 (95 percent confidence interval, 0.52 to 0.75; P<0.001 by the log-rank test). The two-year survival rate was 26.5 percent with radiotherapy plus temozolomide and 10.4 percent with radiotherapy alone. Concomitant treatment with radiotherapy plus temozolomide resulted in grade 3 or 4 hematologic toxic effects in 7 percent of patients.

16,653 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is shown that accurate gene-level abundance estimates are best obtained with large numbers of short single-end reads, and estimates of the relative frequencies of isoforms within single genes may be improved through the use of paired- end reads, depending on the number of possible splice forms for each gene.
Abstract: RNA-Seq is revolutionizing the way transcript abundances are measured. A key challenge in transcript quantification from RNA-Seq data is the handling of reads that map to multiple genes or isoforms. This issue is particularly important for quantification with de novo transcriptome assemblies in the absence of sequenced genomes, as it is difficult to determine which transcripts are isoforms of the same gene. A second significant issue is the design of RNA-Seq experiments, in terms of the number of reads, read length, and whether reads come from one or both ends of cDNA fragments. We present RSEM, an user-friendly software package for quantifying gene and isoform abundances from single-end or paired-end RNA-Seq data. RSEM outputs abundance estimates, 95% credibility intervals, and visualization files and can also simulate RNA-Seq data. In contrast to other existing tools, the software does not require a reference genome. Thus, in combination with a de novo transcriptome assembler, RSEM enables accurate transcript quantification for species without sequenced genomes. On simulated and real data sets, RSEM has superior or comparable performance to quantification methods that rely on a reference genome. Taking advantage of RSEM's ability to effectively use ambiguously-mapping reads, we show that accurate gene-level abundance estimates are best obtained with large numbers of short single-end reads. On the other hand, estimates of the relative frequencies of isoforms within single genes may be improved through the use of paired-end reads, depending on the number of possible splice forms for each gene. RSEM is an accurate and user-friendly software tool for quantifying transcript abundances from RNA-Seq data. As it does not rely on the existence of a reference genome, it is particularly useful for quantification with de novo transcriptome assemblies. In addition, RSEM has enabled valuable guidance for cost-efficient design of quantification experiments with RNA-Seq, which is currently relatively expensive.

14,524 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The fourth edition of the World Health Organization (WHO) classification of tumours of the central nervous system, published in 2007, lists several new entities, including angiocentric glioma, papillary glioneuronal tumour, rosette-forming glioneurs tumour of the fourth ventricle, Papillary tumourof the pineal region, pituicytoma and spindle cell oncocytoma of the adenohypophysis.
Abstract: The fourth edition of the World Health Organization (WHO) classification of tumours of the central nervous system, published in 2007, lists several new entities, including angiocentric glioma, papillary glioneuronal tumour, rosette-forming glioneuronal tumour of the fourth ventricle, papillary tumour of the pineal region, pituicytoma and spindle cell oncocytoma of the adenohypophysis. Histological variants were added if there was evidence of a different age distribution, location, genetic profile or clinical behaviour; these included pilomyxoid astrocytoma, anaplastic medulloblastoma and medulloblastoma with extensive nodularity. The WHO grading scheme and the sections on genetic profiles were updated and the rhabdoid tumour predisposition syndrome was added to the list of familial tumour syndromes typically involving the nervous system. As in the previous, 2000 edition of the WHO ‘Blue Book’, the classification is accompanied by a concise commentary on clinico-pathological characteristics of each tumour type. The 2007 WHO classification is based on the consensus of an international Working Group of 25 pathologists and geneticists, as well as contributions from more than 70 international experts overall, and is presented as the standard for the definition of brain tumours to the clinical oncology and cancer research communities world-wide.

13,134 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A robust gene expression-based molecular classification of GBM into Proneural, Neural, Classical, and Mesenchymal subtypes is described and multidimensional genomic data is integrated to establish patterns of somatic mutations and DNA copy number.

5,764 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
20 Jun 2014-Science
TL;DR: The genome sequence of single cells isolated from brain glioblastomas was examined, which revealed shared chromosomal changes but also extensive transcription variation, including genes related to signaling, which represent potential therapeutic targets.
Abstract: Human cancers are complex ecosystems composed of cells with distinct phenotypes, genotypes, and epigenetic states, but current models do not adequately reflect tumor composition in patients. We used single-cell RNA sequencing (RNA-seq) to profile 430 cells from five primary glioblastomas, which we found to be inherently variable in their expression of diverse transcriptional programs related to oncogenic signaling, proliferation, complement/immune response, and hypoxia. We also observed a continuum of stemness-related expression states that enabled us to identify putative regulators of stemness in vivo. Finally, we show that established glioblastoma subtype classifiers are variably expressed across individual cells within a tumor and demonstrate the potential prognostic implications of such intratumoral heterogeneity. Thus, we reveal previously unappreciated heterogeneity in diverse regulatory programs central to glioblastoma biology, prognosis, and therapy.

3,475 citations

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