Breaking down glioma primary cilia disassembly
Matthew R Sarkisian, Loic P Deleyrolle, Joshua J Breunig

TL;DR
This paper explores how glioblastoma cells break down their primary cilia, which may contribute to cancer progression and recurrence.
Contribution
The paper reviews the molecular mechanisms of cilia disassembly in glioblastoma and highlights alternative pathways beyond the AURKA-HDAC6 axis.
Findings
GBM cells may use pathways independent of AURKA and HDAC6 to disassemble cilia.
GBM cells upregulate proteins associated with cilia disassembly.
Understanding cilia's role in glioma could provide insights into GBM recurrence.
Abstract
While many postmitotic cells in the body harbor cilia, certain aggressive cancers such as glioblastoma (GBM) display low frequencies of cells harboring a primary cilium. Ciliated GBM cells that plan to multiply have to disassemble their cilium in order for centrioles to duplicate and re-purpose for mitosis. Little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying cilia disassembly in GBM, or whether this may represent a driving factor in disease onset, progression, or recurrence. In many cell types, ciliary disassembly is thought to be orchestrated by the aurora kinase A (AURKA) and histone deacetylase 6 (HDAC6) signaling axis. These molecules are often overexpressed in GBM, perhaps owing to the less frequent observation of ciliated GBM cells. Here, we review regulators of the core pathway, and discuss recent studies attempting to inhibit AURKA and HDAC6 in patient and mouse models of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGlioma Diagnosis and Treatment
