AI Article Synopsis

  • Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly invasive brain cancer, and traditional research methods fail to capture its complexity within the brain's architecture.
  • Researchers developed a human brain organotypic model using samples from surgeries to analyze the movement of GBM cells labeled with green fluorescent protein.
  • The study found that GBM cells initially migrate randomly towards blood vessels, increase their speed upon contact, and show a strong tendency to migrate along these vessels while becoming slower over time, demonstrating the significant influence of the vascular environment on their behavior.

Article Abstract

Introduction: Glioblastoma (GBM) is an aggressive primary brain cancer. Lack of effective therapy is related to its highly invasive nature. GBM invasion has been studied with reductionist systems that do not fully recapitulate the cytoarchitecture of the brain. We describe a human-derived brain organotypic model to study the migratory properties of GBM IDH-wild type ex vivo.

Methods: Non-tumor brain samples were obtained from patients undergoing surgery (n = 7). Organotypic brain slices were prepared, and green fluorescent protein (GFP)-labeled primary human GBM IDH-wild type cells (GBM276, GBM612, GBM965) were placed on the organotypic slice. Migration was evaluated via microscopy and immunohistochemistry.

Results: After placement, cells migrated towards blood vessels; initially migrating with limited directionality, sending processes in different directions, and increasing their speed upon contact with the vessel. Once merged, migration speed decreased and continued to decrease with time (p < 0.001). After perivascular localization, migration is limited along the blood vessels in both directions. The percentage of cells that contact blood vessels and then continue to migrate along the vessel was 92.5% (- 3.9/ + 2.9)% while the percentage of cells that migrate along the blood vessel and leave was 7.5% (- 2.9/ + 3.9) (95% CI, Clopper-Pearson (exact); n = 256 cells from six organotypic cultures); these percentages are significantly different from the random (50%) null hypothesis (z = 13.6; p < 10). Further, cells increase their speed in response to a decrease in oxygen tension from atmospheric normoxia (20% O) to anoxia (1% O) (p = 0.033).

Conclusion: Human organotypic models can accurately study cell migration ex vivo. GBM IDH-wild type cells migrate toward the perivascular space in blood vessels and their migratory parameters change once they contact vascular structures and under hypoxic conditions. This model allows the evaluation of GBM invasion, considering the human brain microenvironment when cells are removed from their native niche after surgery.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11060-023-04349-9DOI Listing

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