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Glioma is formed by active Akt1 alone and promoted by active Rac1 in transgenic zebrafish

Authors
Jung, In HyeLeem, Ga LamJung, Dawoon E.Kim, Min HeeKim, Eun YoungKim, Se HoonPark, Hae-ChulPark, Seung Woo
Issue Date
Mar-2013
Publisher
OXFORD UNIV PRESS INC
Keywords
Akt1; epithelial-mesenchymal transition; glioma; Rac1; transgenic zebrafish
Citation
NEURO-ONCOLOGY, v.15, no.3, pp.290 - 304
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
NEURO-ONCOLOGY
Volume
15
Number
3
Start Page
290
End Page
304
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/103793
DOI
10.1093/neuonc/nos387
ISSN
1522-8517
Abstract
Background. Ongoing characterization of glioma has revealed that Ala signaling plays a crucial role in gliomagenesis. In mouse models, however, Akt alone was not sufficient to induce glioma. Methods. We established transgenic zebrafish that overexpressed dominant-active (DA) human Akt1 or Rac1(G12V) (DARac1) at ptf1a domain and investigated transgenic phenotypes and mechanisms leading to gliomagenesis. Results. Transgene expressions were spatiotemporally restricted without any developmental abnormality of embryos and persisted at cerebellum and medulla in adult zebrafish. DAAkt1 alone induced glioma (with visible bumps at the head), with incidences of 36.6% and 49% at 6 and 9 months, respectively. Histologically, gliomas showed various histologic grades, increased proliferation, and frequent invasion into the fourth ventricle. Preferential location of small tumors at periventricular area and coexpression of Her4 suggested that tumors originated from Ptf1a- and Her4-positive progenitor cells at ventricular zone. Gliomagenesis was principally mediated by activation of survival pathway through upregulation of survivin genes. Although DARac1 alone was incapable of gliomagenesis, when coexpressed with DAAkt1, gliomagenesis was accelerated, showing higher tumor incidences (62.0% and 73.3% at 6 and 9 months, respectively), advanced histologic grade, invasiveness, and shortened survival. DARac1 upregulated survivin2, cyclin D1, beta-catenin, and snail1a but downregulated E-cadherin, indicating that DARac1 promotes gliomagenesis by enhancing proliferation, survival, and epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition. On pharmacologic tests, only Akt1/2 inhibitor effectively suppressed gliomagenesis, inhibited cellular proliferation, and induced apoptosis in established gliomas. Conclusions. The zebrafish model reinforces the pivotal role of Akt signaling in gliomagenesis and suggests Rac1 as an important protein involved in progression.
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