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Mouse Models of Human Brain Tumors:
From Cage to Clinic
David H. Gutmann, MD, PhD
©Washington
Director, Neurofibromatosis Center
Co-Director, Neuro-Oncology Program
University, 2009
Donald O. Schnuck Family Professor
Department of Neurology
Washington University School of Medicine
Brain Tumors
• Leading cause of cancer-related death in
children
©Washington
University, 2009
• 4th leading cause of cancer-related death
in adults
Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2A
Cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor 2B
Cyclin-dependent kinase 4
Epidermal growth factor receptor
Murine double minutes
Phosphatase and tensin homology
p14 alternative reading frame
Retinoblastoma 1
TP53
17p LOH
9p
9p
12q
7q
12q
10q
9p
13q
17p
10q LOH
Protein
p16
p15
cdk4
EGF-R
MDM2
PTEN
p14-ARF
Rb
p53
Tumor grade
p53
EGF-R amp
WHO grade I
71%
0%
0%
0%
WHO grade II
63%
0%
0%
0%
WHO grade III
63%
31%
13%
6%
WHO grade IV
68%
26%
38%
21%
University, 2009
Chromosome
©Washington
Gene
Paleo-neuro-oncology
Limited insights into the molecular and cellular changes
©Washington
University, 2009
critical for tumor formation or continued growth
©Washington
University, 2009
sporadic cancer
loss of tumor
suppressor gene
function
increased cell
proliferation
©Washington
CANCER
University, 2009
cancer predisposition
syndrome
Genes
Nervous system tumors
von Hippel-Lindau
vHL (3p25-26)
hemangioblastoma
Tuberous sclerosis complex
TSC1 (9p34)
TSC2 (16p13)
subependymal giant cell astrocytoma
Li-Fraumeni
p53 (17p13)
astrocytoma
primitive neuroectodermal tumor
Neurofibromatosis 1
NF1 (17q11)
optic pathway glioma, astrocytoma
neurofibroma
Neurofibromatosis 2
NF2 (22q12)
schwannoma, meningioma
ependymoma
©Washington
Syndrome
University, 2009
Familial syndromes associated with
nervous system tumors
Brain Tumors in NF1
• 15-20% of children with NF1
• Typically young children
• WHO grade I pilocytic
astrocytoma
©Washington
• Composed of GFAPimmunoreactive (glial) cells
University, 2009
• Commonly involving optic
pathway
Neurofibromatosis type 1 as a model system
for understanding the molecular and cellular
pathogenesis of glioma?
Most common inherited genetic mutation in
pediatric low-grade glioma
©Washington
University, 2009
One of the most common genetic mutations
in adult high-grade glioma (TCGA)
Nf1 gene
neo
Nf1
+/-
+/-
-/-
wild-type
viable
embryonic
lethal
E12.5-13.5
no gliomas
no
neurofibromas
Brannan C. et al., Genes & Development 1994
Jacks T. et al., Nature Genetics 1994
University, 2009
+/-
©Washington
+/+
LoxP
LoxP
Nf1 gene
Cre
recombinase
disrupted Nf1 gene
Zhu Y. et al., Genes & Development 2001
University, 2009
LoxP
©Washington
LoxP
Bajenaru ML, Mol Cell Biol. 2002
LoxP
LoxP
Nf1 flox alleles
Cre
IRES
nLacZ
NO BRAIN TUMORS
Nf1-deficient
University, 2009
normal
©Washington
hGfap promoter
LoxP
LoxP
Nf1 mut allele
neoR
hGfap promoter
Nf1 flox allele
Cre
IRES
nLacZ
OPTIC GLIOMAS
Bajenaru ML, Cancer Res. 2003
NF1-/(tumor)
Nf1-deficient
astrocytes
©Washington
NF1+/(body)
University, 2009
Nf1+/-
Opportunities
1. Identify new targets for therapeutic drug design
2. Determine why certain therapies fail
©Washington
University, 2009
3. Evaluate new therapies in preclinical models
NO TUMOR
normal
Nf1-deficient
Nf1+/-
Nf1-deficient
astrocytes
©Washington
TUMOR
University, 2009
contribution(s) of other
cell types in the tumor
microenvironment
Appropriate stromal
cells and signals
©Washington
University, 2009
Susceptible
preneoplastic cells
1. What stromal cell types and molecular
signals drive NF1 brain tumor cell growth?
normal
MICROGLIA
growth factors
• Increase tumor invasiveness
• Evade immune surveillance
Bajenaru ML, Annals of Neurology 2005
©Washington
secreting cytokines and
University, 2009
• Enhance tumor growth by
brain microglia/astrocyte co-cultures
culture
supernatant
1. Nf1+/-, but not wild-type, microglia promote
Nf1-/- astrocyte proliferation in vitro
2. Nf1+/- microglia elaborate paracrine factors
that promote Nf1-/- astrocyte proliferation in
vitro
Daginakatte & Gutmann, Human Mol. Genet. 2007
©Washington
University, 2009
brain microglia cultures
(Nf1+/+ or Nf1+/-)
equilibration
enhancement
©Washington
elimination
University, 2009
“specialized” microglia
tumor elimination
promote tumor growth
glioma cells
©Washington
CSCs
University, 2009
endothelial cells
Future targeted therapies
cancer
stem cells
endothelial
cells
University, 2009
stromal
cells
©Washington
• microglia
• microglia-produced
growth factors
differentiated
tumor cells
2. Evaluate why certain therapies fail
neurofibromin
GTP
“active”
GDP
ras
ras
cell
growth
“inactive”
cell
growth
“ON”
“OFF”
neurofibromin
X
cell
growth
University, 2009
GDP
©Washington
GTP
X
neurofibromin
GTP
farnesyltransferase
inhibitors
GDP
RAS
cell
growth
H-RAS
N-RAS
K-RAS
University, 2009
“active”
“inactive”
Blocked by FTIs
Not blocked
by FTIs
©Washington
RAS
3. Evaluate new therapies in preclinical models
treatment
10-12 week old
Nf1+/-GFAPCKO mice
vehicle
©Washington
University, 2009
©Washington
University, 2009
Treatment with chemotherapy
used for children with lowgrade brain tumors blocks
mouse optic glioma tumor
growth in vivo
Mechanism of action
Target validation
©Washington
Effect on normal brain
University, 2009
“Off-target” effects
PATIENTS
mouse models
differentiated
tumor cells
stromal
cells
cancer
stem
cells
targeted treatment
strategies
©Washington
molecular &
cellular targets
University, 2009
endothelial
cells
surrogate outcome
measurements
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