Elucidating the pathogenic and biomarker potentials of FOXG1 in glioblastoma

被引:5
|
作者
Richard, Seidu A. [1 ,2 ]
Zhou Jia-hao [1 ]
机构
[1] Jiangsu Univ, Dept Neurosurg, Affiliated Hosp, Zhenjiang, Jiangsu, Peoples R China
[2] Princefield Univ, Dept Med, POB MA 128, Ho, Volta Region, Ghana
关键词
FOXG1; glioblastoma; biomarker; BTIC; NSPC; gliomagenesis; GROWTH-FACTOR-BETA; STEM-CELLS; TRANSCRIPTION FACTORS; SELF-RENEWAL; INHIBITION; PROTEINS; PROMOTES; GROUCHO; BF-1; TELENCEPHALON;
D O I
10.4081/oncol.2020.444
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Glioblastoma (GB) is an extremely pugnacious brain cancer originating from neural stem (NS) cell-like cells. Forkhead box G1 (FOXG1; previously recognized as BF-1, qin, Chicken Brain Factor 1, or XBF-1 and renamed FOXG1 for mouse and human, and FoxG1 for other chordates) is an evolutionary preserved transcription factor driven from the forkhead box group of proteins FOXG1 modulates the speed of neurogenesis by maintaining progenitor cells in a proliferative mode as well as obstructing their differentiation into neurons during the initial periods of cortical formation. FOXG1 has been implicated in the formation of central nervous system (CNS) tumors and precisely GBs. Pathophysiologically, joint actions of FOXG1 and phosphatidylinositol-3-kinases (PI3K) intermediate in intrinsic resistance of human GB cells to transforming growth factor-beta (TGF-ss) stimulation of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 1(p21Cip1) as well as growth inhibition. FOXG1 and NOTCH signaling pathways may functionally interrelate at different stages to facilitate gliomagenesis. Furthermore, FoxG1 actively contributed to the formation of transcription suppression complexes with corepressors of the Groucho/transducin-like Enhancer of split (Gro/TLEs). Also, FOXG1 was stimulated by Gro/TLE1 and abridged by Grg6. FOXG1 silencing in brain tumor-initiating cells (BTICs) also resulted in diminished secretion of markers characteristic undifferentiated natural neural stem/progenitor cells (NSPC) states, such as Oligodendrocyte transcription factor (OLIG2), (sex determining region Y)-box 2. (SOX2) and B lymphoma Mo-MLV insertion region 1 homolog (BMI1). This review therefore focuses on the pathogenic and biomarker potentials of FOXG1 in GB.
引用
收藏
页码:72 / 79
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Genotyping FOXG1 Mutations in Patients with Clinical Evidence of the FOXG1 Syndrome
    Pratt, D. W.
    Warner, J. V.
    Williams, M. G.
    MOLECULAR SYNDROMOLOGY, 2012, 3 (06) : 284 - 287
  • [2] Transcription factors FOXG1 and Groucho/TLE promote glioblastoma growth
    Verginelli, Federica
    Perin, Alessandro
    Dali, Rola
    Fung, Karen H.
    Lo, Rita
    Longatti, Pierluigi
    Guiot, Marie-Christine
    Del Maestro, Rolando F.
    Rossi, Sabrina
    di Porzio, Umberto
    Stechishin, Owen
    Weiss, Samuel
    Stifani, Stefano
    NATURE COMMUNICATIONS, 2013, 4
  • [3] Transcription factors FOXG1 and Groucho/TLE promote glioblastoma growth
    Federica Verginelli
    Alessandro Perin
    Rola Dali
    Karen H. Fung
    Rita Lo
    Pierluigi Longatti
    Marie-Christine Guiot
    Rolando F. Del Maestro
    Sabrina Rossi
    Umberto di Porzio
    Owen Stechishin
    Samuel Weiss
    Stefano Stifani
    Nature Communications, 4
  • [4] CONTROL OF GLIOBLASTOMA SELF-RENEWAL AND PROLIFERATION BY THE TRANSCRIPTION FACTOR FOXG1
    Perin, Alessandro
    Fung, Karen H.
    Longatti, Pierluigi
    Guiot, Marie-Christine
    Del Maestro, Rolando F.
    Rossi, Sabrina
    Stechishin, Owen
    Weiss, Samuel
    Stifani, Stefano
    NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2010, 12 : 124 - 124
  • [5] FOXG1 is overexpressed in hepatoblastoma
    Adesina, Adekunle Michael
    Nguyen, Yummy
    Guanaratne, Preethi
    Pulliam, Joseph
    Lopez-Terrada, Dolores
    Margolin, Judy
    Finegold, Milton
    HUMAN PATHOLOGY, 2007, 38 (03) : 400 - 409
  • [6] FOXG1 IS A CANDIDATE TRANSCRIPTIONAL MASTER REGULATOR IN NEURAL STEM CELLS AND GLIOBLASTOMA
    Bulstrode, Harry
    Pollard, Steven
    NEURO-ONCOLOGY, 2014, 16
  • [7] FOXG1 syndrome: genotype-phenotype association in 83 patients with FOXG1 variants
    Mitter, Diana
    Pringsheim, Milka
    Kaulisch, Marc
    Pluemacher, Kim Sarah
    Schroeder, Simone
    Warthemann, Rita
    Abou Jamra, Rami
    Baethmann, Martina
    Bast, Thomas
    Buettel, Hans-Martin
    Cohen, Julie S.
    Conover, Elizabeth
    Courage, Carolina
    Eger, Angelika
    Fatemi, Ali
    Grebe, Theresa A.
    Hauser, Natalie S.
    Heinritz, Wolfram
    Helbig, Katherine L.
    Heruth, Marion
    Huhle, Dagmar
    Hoeft, Karen
    Karch, Stephanie
    Kluger, Gerhard
    Korenke, G. Christoph
    Lemke, Johannes R.
    Lutz, Richard E.
    Patzer, Steffi
    Prehl, Isabelle
    Hoertnagel, Konstanze
    Ramsey, Keri
    Rating, Tina
    Riess, Angelika
    Rohena, Luis
    Schimmel, Mareike
    Westman, Rachel
    Zech, Frank-Martin
    Zoll, Barbara
    Malzahn, Dorthe
    Zirn, Birgit
    Brockmann, Knut
    GENETICS IN MEDICINE, 2018, 20 (01) : 98 - 108
  • [8] Expanding the phenotype associated with FOXG1 mutations and in vivo FoxG1 chromatin-binding dynamics
    De Filippis, R.
    Pancrazi, L.
    Bjorgo, K.
    Rosseto, A.
    Kleefstra, T.
    Grillo, E.
    Panighini, A.
    Cardarelli, F.
    Meloni, I.
    Ariani, F.
    Mencarelli, M. A.
    Hayek, J.
    Renieri, A.
    Costa, M.
    Mari, F.
    CLINICAL GENETICS, 2012, 82 (04) : 395 - 403
  • [9] Structural Basis for DNA Recognition by FOXG1 and the Characterization of Disease-causing FOXG1 Mutations
    Dai, Shuyan
    Li, Jun
    Zhang, Huajun
    Chen, Xiaojuan
    Guo, Ming
    Chen, Zhuchu
    Chen, Yongheng
    JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR BIOLOGY, 2020, 432 (23) : 6146 - 6156
  • [10] FOXG1 Dose in Brain Development
    Hettige, Nuwan C.
    Ernst, Carl
    FRONTIERS IN PEDIATRICS, 2019, 7