AI Article Synopsis

  • EFEMP1 has conflicting roles in glioma cancer, influencing different cell subpopulations based on their EGFR expression levels.
  • In high-EGFR-expressing cells, EFEMP1 reduces EGFR and cellular respiration, while in low-EGFR-expressing cells, it enhances NOTCH1, MMP2 levels, cell invasiveness, and respiration rates.
  • The presence of EFEMP1 affects tumor growth dynamics and subpopulation equilibrium in xenografts, suggesting it plays a critical role in adapting cancer cells to their changing microenvironment and potential therapies.

Article Abstract

Conflicting functions of EFEMP1 in cancer have been reported. Using two syngeneic glioma cell lines (U251 and U251-NS) carrying two different principal cell subpopulations that express high or low EGFR, and that are able to interconvert via mis-segregation of chromosome 7 (Chr7), we studied EFEMP1's cell-context-dependent functions in regulating subpopulation equilibrium, here defined by the percentage of cells carrying different copies of Chr7. We found that EFEMP1 attenuated levels of EGFR and cellular respiration in high-EGFR-expressing cells, but increased levels of NOTCH1, MMP2, cell invasiveness, and both oxidative phosphorylation and glycolytic respiration in low-EGFR-expressing cells. Consistently, EFEMP1 suppressed intracranial xenograft formation in U251 and promoted its formation in U251-NS. Interestingly, subpopulation equilibria in xenografts of U251-NS without EFEMP1 overexpression were responsive to inoculum size (1, 10 and 100 thousand cells), which may change the tumor-onset environment. It was not observed in xenografts of U251-NS with EFEMP1 overexpression. The anti-EGFR function of EFEMP1 suppressed acceleration of growth of U251-NS, but not the subpopulation equilibrium, when serially passed under a different (serum-containing adherent) culture condition. Overall, the data suggest that the orthotopic environment of the brain tumor supports EFEMP1 in carrying out both its anti-EGFR and pro-invasive/cancer stem cell-transforming functions in the two glioma cell subpopulations during formation of a single tumor, where EFEMP1 stabilizes the subpopulation equilibrium in response to alterations of the growth environment. This finding implies that EFEMP1 may restrain cancer plasticity in coping with ever-changing tumor microenvironments and/or therapeutic-intervention stresses.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4741566PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.5220DOI Listing

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