Sequential fate-switches in stem-like cells drive the tumorigenic trajectory from human neural stem cells to malignant glioma

Author:

Wang Xiaofei,Zhou Ran,Xiong Yanzhen,Zhou Lingling,Yan Xiang,Wang Manli,Li Fan,Xie Chuanxing,Zhang Yiming,Huang Zongyao,Ding Chaoqiong,Shi Kaidou,Li Weida,Liu YuORCID,Cao Zhongwei,Zhang Zhen-Ning,Zhou Shengtao,Chen ChongORCID,Zhang YanORCID,Chen LuORCID,Wang YuanORCID

Abstract

AbstractGlioblastoma (GBM) is an incurable and highly heterogeneous brain tumor, originating from human neural stem/progenitor cells (hNSCs/hNPCs) years ahead of diagnosis. Despite extensive efforts to characterize hNSCs and end-stage GBM at bulk and single-cell levels, the de novo gliomagenic path from hNSCs is largely unknown due to technical difficulties in early-stage sampling and preclinical modeling. Here, we established two highly penetrant hNSC-derived malignant glioma models, which resemble the histopathology and transcriptional heterogeneity of human GBM. Integrating time-series analyses of whole-exome sequencing, bulk and single-cell RNA-seq, we reconstructed gliomagenic trajectories, and identified a persistent NSC-like population at all stages of tumorigenesis. Through trajectory analyses and lineage tracing, we showed that tumor progression is primarily driven by multi-step transcriptional reprogramming and fate-switches in the NSC-like cells, which sequentially generate malignant heterogeneity and induce tumor phenotype transitions. We further uncovered stage-specific oncogenic cascades, and among the candidate genes we functionally validated C1QL1 as a new glioma-promoting factor. Importantly, the neurogenic-to-gliogenic switch in NSC-like cells marks an early stage characterized by a burst of oncogenic alterations, during which transient AP-1 inhibition is sufficient to inhibit gliomagenesis. Together, our results reveal previously undercharacterized molecular dynamics and fate choices driving de novo gliomagenesis from hNSCs, and provide a blueprint for potential early-stage treatment/diagnosis for GBM.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cell Biology,Molecular Biology

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