Inflammation is a key aspect of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) although it remains unclear how it contributes to GBM pathogenesis. Inflammasomes are intracellular multi-protein complexes that are involved in innate immunity… Click to show full abstract
Inflammation is a key aspect of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) although it remains unclear how it contributes to GBM pathogenesis. Inflammasomes are intracellular multi-protein complexes that are involved in innate immunity and are activated by cellular stress, principally in macrophages. This study examined the expression of inflammasome-associated genes in GBM, particularly absent in melanoma 2 (AIM2). Tissue samples from surgically-resected GBM tumors (nā=ā10) were compared to resected brain specimens from patients with epilepsy (age- and sex-matched Other Disease Controls (ODC, n=5)) by qRT-PCR, western blotting and immunofluorescence. Gene expression studies in human astrocytoma U251 cells were performed and the effects of deleting the absent in melanoma 2 (AIM2) gene using the CRISPR-Cas9 system were analyzed. GBM tissues showed significantly elevated expression of multiple immune (CD3E, CD163, CD68, MX1, ARG1) and inflammasome (AIM2, NLRP1, IL18, CASP1, and IL-33) genes compared to ODC tissues, without induction of IL1B, IFNG or TNFA. An insert-containing AIM2 variant transcript was highly expressed in GBM tissues and in U251 cells. AIM2 immunoreactivity was concentrated in the tumor core in the absence of PCNA immunodetection and showed a predominant 52 kDa immunoreactive band on western blot. Deletion of AIM2 resulted in significantly enhanced proliferation of U251 cells, which also displayed increased resistance to temozolomide treatment. GBM tumors express a distinct profile of inflammasome-associated genes in a tumor-specific manner. AIM2 expression in tumor cells suppressed cell proliferation while also conferring increased susceptibility to contemporary GBM therapy.
               
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