DNMT-dependent suppression of microRNA regulates the induction of GBM tumor-propagating phenotype by Oct4 and Sox2

H Lopez-Bertoni, B Lal, A Li, M Caplan… - Oncogene, 2015 - nature.com
Oncogene, 2015nature.com
Cancer stem-like cells represent poorly differentiated multipotent tumor-propagating cells
that contribute disproportionately to therapeutic resistance and tumor recurrence.
Transcriptional mechanisms that control the phenotypic conversion of tumor cells lacking
tumor-propagating potential to tumor-propagating stem-like cells remain obscure. Here we
show that the reprogramming transcription factors Oct4 and Sox2 induce glioblastoma cells
to become stem-like and tumor–propagating via a mechanism involving direct DNA methyl …
Abstract
Cancer stem-like cells represent poorly differentiated multipotent tumor-propagating cells that contribute disproportionately to therapeutic resistance and tumor recurrence. Transcriptional mechanisms that control the phenotypic conversion of tumor cells lacking tumor-propagating potential to tumor-propagating stem-like cells remain obscure. Here we show that the reprogramming transcription factors Oct4 and Sox2 induce glioblastoma cells to become stem-like and tumor–propagating via a mechanism involving direct DNA methyl transferase (DNMT) promoter transactivation, resulting in global DNA methylation-and DNMT-dependent downregulation of multiple microRNAs (miRNAs). We show that one such downregulated miRNA, miRNA-148a, inhibits glioblastoma cell stem-like properties and tumor-propagating potential. This study identifies a novel and targetable molecular circuit by which glioma cell stemness and tumor-propagating capacity are regulated.
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