The Role of Telomere Maintenance in the Spontaneous Growth Arrest of Pediatric Low-Grade Gliomas
2006; Elsevier BV; Volume: 8; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1593/neo.05715
ISSN1522-8002
AutoresUri Tabori, Bisera Vukovic, Maria Zieleńska, Cynthia Hawkins, Ilan Braude, James T. Rutka, Éric Bouffet, Jeremy A. Squire, David Malkin,
Tópico(s)Mitochondrial Function and Pathology
ResumoSpontaneous tumor regression is a unique feature of pediatric low-grade gliomas (PLGG). We speculated that lack of telomere maintenance is responsible for this behavior. We first looked for evidence of telomerase activity and alternative-lengthening telomeres (ALT) in 56 PLGG. Telomerase activity was observed in 0 of 11 PLGG in contrast to 10 of 13 high-grade pediatric brain tumors. There was no ALT in 45 of 45 samples. We applied Q-FISH to eight patients whose indolent PLGG underwent two metachronous biopsies over a lag of several years. Telomere shortening was observed in the second biopsy in all tumors but not in a normal brain control (P < .0001), indicating that lack of telomere maintenance is associated with continuous telomere erosion. Based on these observations, we observed that younger PLGG patients who exhibit more aggressive and frequently recurrent tumors had significantly longer telomeres than older ones (P = .00014). Tumors with a terminal restriction fragment length of 8.0) conferred a high likelihood of late recurrences in PLGG. Our findings provide a plausible biological mechanism to explain the tendency of PLGG to exhibit growth arrest and spontaneous regression. Telomere maintenance may therefore represent the first known biologic prognostic marker in PLGG.
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