FoxM1 drives a feed-forward STAT3 activation loop that promotes self-renewal and tumorigenicity of glioblastoma stem-like cells.
By: Ai-Hua Gong, Ping Wei, Sicong Zhang, Jun Yao, Ying Yuan, Aidong Zhou, Frederick F Lang, Amy B Heimberger, Ganesh Rao, Suyun Huang

Department of Neurosurgery, The University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center.
2015-4-3; doi: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-14-2800
Abstract

The growth factor PDGF controls the development of glioblastoma (GBM) but its contribution to the function of GBM stem-like cells (GSC) has been little studied. Here we report that the transcription factor FoxM1 promotes PDGFA-STAT3 signaling to drive GSC self-renewal and tumorigenicity. In GBM we found a positive correlation between expression of FoxM1 and PDGF-A. In GSC and mouse neural stem cells, FoxM1 bound to the PDGF-A promoter to upregulate PDGF-A expression, acting to maintain the stem-like qualities of GSC in part through this mechanism. Analysis of the human cancer genomic database TCGA revealed that GBM express higher levels of STAT3, a PDGF-A effector signaling molecule, as compared with normal brain. FoxM1 regulated STAT3 transcription through interactions with the β-catenin/TCF4 complex. FoxM1 deficiency inhibited PDGF-A and STAT3 expression in neural stem cells and GSC, abolishing their stem-like and tumorigenic properties. Further mechanistic investigations defined a FoxM1-PDGFA-STAT3 feed-forward pathway that was sufficient to confer stem-like properties to glioma cells. Collectively, our findings showed how FoxM1 activates expression of PDGF-A and STAT3 in a pathway required to maintain the self-renewal and tumorigenicity of glioma stem-like cells.



Copyright © 2015, American Association for Cancer Research.

PMID:25832656






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