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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Aberrations of Genomic Imprinting in Glioblastoma Formation

Anna Lozano-ureñaAnna Lozano-ureñaEsteban Jiménez-villalbaAlejandro Pinedo-serranoAntonio Jordán-plaMartina KirsteinMartina KirsteinSacri R. FerrónSacri R. Ferrón

subject

Cancer ResearchGenomic imprintingSomatic cellSubventricular zonePopulationReviewBiologylcsh:RC254-282MethylationGliomamedicineEpigeneticsImprinting (psychology)educationneural stem cellsNeural stem cellseducation.field_of_studyglioblastomasubventricular zonelcsh:Neoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensmedicine.diseaseNeural stem cellgenomic imprintingnervous system diseasesOncologyCancer researchmethylationStem cellGenomic imprintingGlioblastoma

description

In human glioblastoma (GBM), the presence of a small population of cells with stem cell characteristics, the glioma stem cells (GSCs), has been described. These cells have GBM potential and are responsible for the origin of the tumors. However, whether GSCs originate from normal neural stem cells (NSCs) as a consequence of genetic and epigenetic changes and/or dedifferentiation from somatic cells remains to be investigated. Genomic imprinting is an epigenetic marking process that causes genes to be expressed depending on their parental origin. The dysregulation of the imprinting pattern or the loss of genomic imprinting (LOI) have been described in different tumors including GBM, being one of the earliest and most common events that occurs in human cancers. Here we have gathered the current knowledge of the role of imprinted genes in normal NSCs function and how the imprinting process is altered in human GBM. We also review the changes at particular imprinted loci that might be involved in the development of the tumor. Understanding the mechanistic similarities in the regulation of genomic imprinting between normal NSCs and GBM cells will be helpful to identify molecular players that might be involved in the development of human GBM.

http://hdl.handle.net/10578/30503