Transcriptional Profiling of a Patient-Matched Cohort of Glioblastoma (IDH-Wildtype) for Therapeutic Target and Repurposing Drug Identification

Author:

Roddy Aideen C.1,McInerney Caitríona E.1,Flannery Tom2,Healy Estelle G.3,Stewart James P.1ORCID,Spence Veronica J.1,Walsh Jamie1,Salto-Tellez Manuel14,McArt Darragh G.1,Prise Kevin M.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Patrick G. Johnson Centre for Cancer Research, Queen’s University Belfast, Belfast BT9 7AE, UK

2. Department of Neurosurgery, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast BT12 6BA, UK

3. Regional Service for Neuropathology, Institute of Pathology, Royal Victoria Hospital, Belfast Health and Social Care Trust, Belfast BT12 6BA, UK

4. Integrated Pathology Unit, Division of Molecular Pathology, The Institute of Cancer Research, Sutton SM2 5NG, UK

Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most prevalent and aggressive adult brain tumor. Despite multi-modal therapies, GBM recurs, and patients have poor survival (~14 months). Resistance to therapy may originate from a subpopulation of tumor cells identified as glioma-stem cells (GSC), and new treatments are urgently needed to target these. The biology underpinning GBM recurrence was investigated using whole transcriptome profiling of patient-matched initial and recurrent GBM (recGBM). Differential expression analysis identified 147 significant probes. In total, 24 genes were validated using expression data from four public cohorts and the literature. Functional analyses revealed that transcriptional changes to recGBM were dominated by angiogenesis and immune-related processes. The role of MHC class II proteins in antigen presentation and the differentiation, proliferation, and infiltration of immune cells was enriched. These results suggest recGBM would benefit from immunotherapies. The altered gene signature was further analyzed in a connectivity mapping analysis with QUADrATiC software to identify FDA-approved repurposing drugs. Top-ranking target compounds that may be effective against GSC and GBM recurrence were rosiglitazone, nizatidine, pantoprazole, and tolmetin. Our translational bioinformatics pipeline provides an approach to identify target compounds for repurposing that may add clinical benefit in addition to standard therapies against resistant cancers such as GBM.

Funder

Brainwaves Northern Ireland

Cancer Research UK studentship

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,Medicine (miscellaneous)

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