谷氨酸受体
胶质瘤
谷胱甘肽
癌症研究
药理学
兴奋毒性
脑瘤
体内
生物
病理
医学
生物化学
受体
生物技术
酶
作者
Stephanie M. Robert,Susan Buckingham,Susan L. Campbell,Stefanie Robel,Kenneth T. Holt,Toyin Ogunrinu-Babarinde,Paula Warren,David M. White,Meredith A. Reid,Jenny Eschbacher,Michael E. Berens,Adrienne C. Lahti,L. Burt Nabors,Harald Sontheimer
出处
期刊:Science Translational Medicine
[American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS)]
日期:2015-05-27
卷期号:7 (289)
被引量:191
标识
DOI:10.1126/scitranslmed.aaa8103
摘要
Glioma is the most common malignant primary brain tumor. Its rapid growth is aided by tumor-mediated glutamate release, creating peritumoral excitotoxic cell death and vacating space for tumor expansion. Glioma glutamate release may also be responsible for seizures, which complicate the clinical course for many patients and are often the presenting symptom. A hypothesized glutamate release pathway is the cystine/glutamate transporter System xc (-) (SXC), responsible for the cellular synthesis of glutathione (GSH). However, the relationship of SXC-mediated glutamate release, seizures, and tumor growth remains unclear. Probing expression of SLC7A11/xCT, the catalytic subunit of SXC, in patient and mouse-propagated tissues, we found that ~50% of patient tumors have elevated SLC7A11 expression. Compared with tumors lacking this transporter, in vivo propagated and intracranially implanted SLC7A11-expressing tumors grew faster, produced pronounced peritumoral glutamate excitotoxicity, induced seizures, and shortened overall survival. In agreement with animal data, increased SLC7A11 expression predicted shorter patient survival according to genomic data in the REMBRANDT (National Institutes of Health Repository for Molecular Brain Neoplasia Data) database. In a clinical pilot study, we used magnetic resonance spectroscopy to determine SXC-mediated glutamate release by measuring acute changes in glutamate after administration of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration-approved SXC inhibitor, sulfasalazine (SAS). In nine glioma patients with biopsy-confirmed SXC expression, we found that expression positively correlates with glutamate release, which is acutely inhibited with oral SAS. These data suggest that SXC is the major pathway for glutamate release from gliomas and that SLC7A11 expression predicts accelerated growth and tumor-associated seizures.
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