Maintenance of a healthy proteome is essential for cellular homeostasis and loss of proteostasis is associated with tissue dysfunction and neurodegenerative disease. The mechanisms that support proteostasis in healthy cells and how they become defective during aging or in disease states are not fully understood. Here, we investigate the transcriptional programs that are essential for neural stem and progenitor cell (NSPC) function and uncover a program of autophagy genes under the control of the transcription factor FOXO3. Using genomic approaches, we observe that FOXO3 directly binds a network of target genes in adult NSPCs that are involved in autophagy, and find that FOXO3 functionally regulates induction of autophagy in these cells. Interestingly, in the absence of FOXO activity, aggregates accumulate in NSPCs, and this effect is reversed by TOR (target of rapamycin) inhibition. Surprisingly, enhancing FOXO3 causes nucleation of protein aggregates, but does not increase their degradation. The work presented here identifies a genomic network under the direct control of a key transcriptional regulator of aging that is critical for maintaining a healthy mammalian stem cell pool to support lifelong neurogenesis.
Background Glioblastoma (GBM) is an aggressive, age‐associated malignant glioma that contains populations of cancer stem cells. These glioma stem cells (GSCs) evade therapeutic interventions and repopulate tumors due to their existence in a slowly cycling quiescent state. Although aging is well known to increase cancer initiation, the extent to which the mechanisms supporting GSC tumorigenicity are related to physiological aging remains unknown. Aims Here, we investigate the transcriptional mechanisms by which Forkhead Box O3 (FOXO3), a transcriptional regulator that promotes healthy aging, affects GSC function and the extent to which FOXO3 transcriptional networks are dysregulated in aging and GBM. Methods and results We performed transcriptome analysis of clinical GBM tumors and observed that high FOXO3 activity is associated with gene expression signatures of stem cell quiescence, reduced oxidative metabolism, and improved patient outcomes. Consistent with these findings, we show that elevated FOXO3 activity significantly reduces the proliferation of GBM‐derived GSCs. Using RNA‐seq, we find that functional ablation of FOXO3 in GSCs rewires the transcriptional circuitry associated with metabolism, epigenetic stability, quiescence, and differentiation. Since FOXO3 has been implicated in healthy aging, we then investigated the extent to which it regulates common transcriptional programs in aging neural stem cells (NSCs) and GSCs. We uncover a shared transcriptional program and, most strikingly, find that FOXO3‐regulated pathways are associated with altered mitochondrial functions in both aging and GBM. Conclusions This work identifies a FOXO‐associated transcriptional program that correlates between GSCs and aging NSCs and is enriched for metabolic and stemness pathways connected with GBM and aging.
Misactivation of the Hedgehog pathway can cause cancers such as medulloblastomas, the most common malignant brain tumors in children. Hedgehog signals are transmitted through primary cilia, where Hedgehog ligands bind to Patched1 and activate Smoothened through interactions with cilia-associated sterol lipids. The gene expression programs driving cellular responses to ciliary Hedgehog signals are incompletely understood. Thus, to define Hedgehog target genes and elucidate mechanisms underlying Hedgehog-associated medulloblastomas, we performed RNA sequencing of cells after treatment with Hedgehog ligands (Shh, Dhh, Ihh), cilia-associated lipids (7b,27-dihydroxycholesterol, 24(S),25-epoxycholesterol), or synthetic lipids or small molecules that activate Smoothened (20(S)-hydroxycholesterol, SAG). Nonspecific gene expression changes were identified by performing RNA sequencing (1) after treatment of CRISPR mediated Smo-/- cells with the same Hedgehog pathway agonists, (2) after treatment with vehicle controls, or (3) after treatment with sterol lipids that are unable to activate Smoothened (7a,27-dihydroxycholesterol). Differentially expressed genes were integrated across RNA sequencing of human medulloblastomas (n=458) or the Math1-Cre SmoM2 mouse genetic model of Hedgehog-associated medulloblastoma. Mechanistic studies validating Hedgehog target genes were performed using CRISPR interference, genetic gain-of-function, molecular biology, quantitative immunofluorescence, or cell biology approaches. RNA sequencing after treatment with Hedgehog pathway agonists identified a core gene expression program comprised of 155 genes driving lipid synthesis, metabolism, signaling, adhesion, or angiogenesis. Integration of transcriptomic datasets revealed a conserved gene expression program driving cellular responses to ciliary Hedgehog signals in human or mouse medulloblastomas, including known target genes such as Gli1 or Ptch1, and novel target genes such as Hsd11b1 or Retnla. Retnla is a regulator of sterol synthase expression, and Hsd11b1 is a sterol synthase that opposes the action of Hsd11b2, a driver and druggable dependency underlying Hedgehog-associated medulloblastoma. In support of these findings, mechanistic studies demonstrated Retnla drives expression of Hsd11b2, and showed Hsd11b1 negatively regulates the Hedgehog pathway.
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