Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/9399
Title: Engineering Genetic Predisposition in Human Neuroepithelial Stem Cells Recapitulates Medulloblastoma Tumorigenesis
Authors: Huang, Miller
Tailor, Jignesh
Zhen, Qiqi
Gillmor, Aaron H.
Miller, Matthew L.
Weishaupt, Holger
Chen, Justin
Zheng, Tina
Nash, Emily K.
McHenry, Lauren K.
An, Zhenyi
Ye, Fubaiyang
Takashima, Yasuhiro
Clarke, James
Ayetey, Harold
Cavalli, Florence M.G.
Luu, Betty
Moriarity, Branden S.
Ilkhanizadeh, Shirin
Chavez, Lukas
Yu, Chunying
Kurian, Kathreena M.
Magnaldo, Thierry
Sevenet, Nicolas
Koch, Philipp
Pollard, Steven M.
Dirks, Peter
Snyder, Michael P.
Largaespada, David A.
Cho, Yoon Jae
Phillips, Joanna J.
Swartling, Fredrik J.
Morrissy, A. Sorana
Kool, Marcel
Pfiste, Stefan M.
Taylor, Michael D.
Smith, Austin
Weiss, William A.
Keywords: SHH
human pluripotent stem cells
medulloblastoma
neuroepithelial stem cells.
Issue Date: 2019
Publisher: Cell Stem Cell
Abstract: Human neural stem cell cultures provide progenitor cells that are potential cells of origin for brain cancers. However, the extent to which genetic predisposition to tumor formation can be faithfully captured in stem cell lines is uncertain. Here, we evaluated neuroepithelial stem (NES) cells, representative of cerebellar progenitors. We transduced NES cells with MYCN, observing medulloblastoma upon orthotopic implantation in mice. Significantly, transcriptomes and patterns of DNA methylation from xenograft tumors were globally more representative of human medulloblastoma compared to a MYCN-driven genetically engineered mouse model. Orthotopic transplantation of NES cells generated from Gorlin syndrome patients, who are predisposed to medulloblastoma due to germline-mutated PTCH1, also generated medulloblastoma. We engineered candidate cooperating mutations in Gorlin NES cells, with mutation of DDX3X or loss of GSE1 both accelerating tumorigenesis. These findings demonstrate that human NES cells provide a potent experimental resource for dissecting genetic causation in medulloblastoma.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/9399
Appears in Collections:School of Medical Sciences



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