Calcium signaling orchestrates glioblastoma development: Facts and conjunctures

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Leclerc, Catherine | Haeich, Jacques | Aulestia, Francisco J. | Kilhoffer, Marie-Claude | Miller, Andrew L. | Neant, Isabelle | Webb, Sarah E. | Schaeffer, Etienne | Junier, Marie-Pierre | Chneiweiss, Herve | Moreau, Marc

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. While it is a relatively rare disease, glioblastoma multiform (GBM) is one of the more deadly-adult cancers. Following current interventions, the tumor is never eliminated whatever the treatment performed; whether it is radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or surgery. One hypothesis to explain this poor outcome is the ``cancer stem cell'' hypothesis. This concept proposes that a minority of cells within the tumor mass share many of the properties of adult neural stem cells and it is these that are responsible for the growth of the tumor and its resistance to existing therapies. Accumulating evidence suggests that Ca2+ might also be an important positive regulator of tumorigenesis in GBM, in processes involving quiescence, maintenance, proliferation, or migration. Glioblastoma tumors are generally thought to develop by co-opting pathways that are involved in the formation of an organ. We propose that the cells initiating the tumor, and subsequently the cells of the tumor mass, must hijack the different checkpoints that evolution has selected in order to prevent the pathological development of an organ. In this article, two main points are discussed. (i) The first is the establishment of a so-called ``cellular society,'' which is required to create a favorable microenvironment. (ii) The second is that GBM can be considered to be an organism, which fights to survive and develop. Since GBM evolves in a limited space, its only chance of development is to overcome the evolutionary checkpoints. For example, the deregulation of the normal Ca2+ signaling elements contributes to the progression of the disease. Thus, by manipulating the Ca2+ signaling, the GBM cells might not be killed, but might be reprogrammed toward a new fate that is either easy to cure or that has no aberrant functioning. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Calcium and Cell Fate. Guest Editors: Jacques Haiech, Claus Heizmann, Joachim Krebs, Thierry Capiod and Olivier Mignen.

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