Cell
Volume 185, Issue 16, 4 August 2022, Pages 2899-2917.e31
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Article
Glioblastoma hijacks neuronal mechanisms for brain invasion

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2022.06.054Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Molecular glioblastoma cell states are related to cell functions

  • Neuronal-like, single-glioblastoma cells drive brain invasion

  • Glioblastoma invasion resembles multiple traits of neuronal development

  • Neurogliomal synapses stimulate neurite-like tumor microtubes crucial for invasion

Summary

Glioblastomas are incurable tumors infiltrating the brain. A subpopulation of glioblastoma cells forms a functional and therapy-resistant tumor cell network interconnected by tumor microtubes (TMs). Other subpopulations appear unconnected, and their biological role remains unclear. Here, we 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. This subpopulation corresponds to neuronal and neural-progenitor-like tumor cell states, as defined by single-cell transcriptomics, both in mouse models and in the human disease. Tumor cell invasion resembled neuronal migration mechanisms and adopted a Lévy-like movement pattern of probing the environment. Neuronal activity induced complex calcium signals in glioblastoma cells followed by the de novo formation of TMs and increased invasion speed. Collectively, superimposing molecular and functional single-cell data revealed that neuronal mechanisms govern glioblastoma cell invasion on multiple levels. This explains how glioblastoma’s dissemination and cellular heterogeneity are closely interlinked.

Keywords

glioblastoma
tumor microtubes
tumor cell networks
cancer neuroscience
neurogliomal synapses
neuron-tumor interaction
cell heterogeneity
glutamatergic synapse

Data and code availability

  • Single-cell RNA-seq data used in this study are listed with accession numbers in the key resources table.

  • This paper does not report original code.

  • Any additional information that support the findings of this study are available on request from the lead contact.

Cited by (0)

11

These authors contributed equally

12

These authors contributed equally

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Lead contact