The Dissection of Signaling Cascades in Neural Stem Cell Proliferation & GBM Promotion

abstract: Cells live in complex environments and must be able to adapt to environmental changes in order to survive. The ability of a cell to survive and thrive in a changing environment depends largely on its ability to receive and respond to extracellular signals. Initiating with receptors, signal...

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Other Authors: Kusne, Yael N. (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25048
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-250482018-06-22T03:05:07Z The Dissection of Signaling Cascades in Neural Stem Cell Proliferation & GBM Promotion abstract: Cells live in complex environments and must be able to adapt to environmental changes in order to survive. The ability of a cell to survive and thrive in a changing environment depends largely on its ability to receive and respond to extracellular signals. Initiating with receptors, signal transduction cascades begin translating extracellular signals into intracellular messages. Such signaling cascades are responsible for the regulation of cellular metabolism, cell growth, cell movement, transcription, translation, proliferation and differentiation. This dissertation seeks to dissect and examine critical signaling pathways involved in the regulation of proliferation in neural stem cells (Chapter 2) and the regulation of Glioblastoma Multiforme pathogenesis (GBM; Chapter 3). In Chapter 2 of this dissertation, we hypothesize that the mTOR signaling pathway plays a significant role in the determination of neural stem cell proliferation given its control of cell growth, metabolism and survival. We describe the effect of inhibition of mTOR signaling on neural stem cell proliferation using animal models of aging. Our results show that the molecular method of targeted inhibition may result in differential effects on neural stem cell proliferation as the use of rapamycin significantly reduced proliferation while the use of metformin did not. Abnormal signaling cascades resulting in unrestricted proliferation may lead to the development of brain cancer, such as GBM. In Chapter 3 of this dissertation, we hypothesize that the inhibition of the protein kinase, aPKCλ results in halted GBM progression (invasion and proliferation) due to its central location in multiple signaling cascades. Using in-vitro and in-vivo models, we show that aPKCλ functions as a critical node in GBM signaling as both cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous signaling converge on aPKCλ resulting in pathogenic downstream effects. This dissertation aims to uncover the molecular mechanisms involved in cell signaling pathways which are responsible for critical cellular effects such as proliferation, invasion and transcriptional regulation. Dissertation/Thesis Kusne, Yael N. (Author) Sanai, Nader (Advisor) Neisewander, Janet (Advisor) Tran, Nhan (Committee member) Hammer, Ronald (Committee member) Narayanan, Vinodh (Committee member) Shapiro, Joan (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) Neurosciences Cellular biology Molecular biology aPKC Glioblastoma Neural Stem Cell eng 194 pages Ph.D. Neuroscience 2014 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25048 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2014
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Neurosciences
Cellular biology
Molecular biology
aPKC
Glioblastoma
Neural Stem Cell
spellingShingle Neurosciences
Cellular biology
Molecular biology
aPKC
Glioblastoma
Neural Stem Cell
The Dissection of Signaling Cascades in Neural Stem Cell Proliferation & GBM Promotion
description abstract: Cells live in complex environments and must be able to adapt to environmental changes in order to survive. The ability of a cell to survive and thrive in a changing environment depends largely on its ability to receive and respond to extracellular signals. Initiating with receptors, signal transduction cascades begin translating extracellular signals into intracellular messages. Such signaling cascades are responsible for the regulation of cellular metabolism, cell growth, cell movement, transcription, translation, proliferation and differentiation. This dissertation seeks to dissect and examine critical signaling pathways involved in the regulation of proliferation in neural stem cells (Chapter 2) and the regulation of Glioblastoma Multiforme pathogenesis (GBM; Chapter 3). In Chapter 2 of this dissertation, we hypothesize that the mTOR signaling pathway plays a significant role in the determination of neural stem cell proliferation given its control of cell growth, metabolism and survival. We describe the effect of inhibition of mTOR signaling on neural stem cell proliferation using animal models of aging. Our results show that the molecular method of targeted inhibition may result in differential effects on neural stem cell proliferation as the use of rapamycin significantly reduced proliferation while the use of metformin did not. Abnormal signaling cascades resulting in unrestricted proliferation may lead to the development of brain cancer, such as GBM. In Chapter 3 of this dissertation, we hypothesize that the inhibition of the protein kinase, aPKCλ results in halted GBM progression (invasion and proliferation) due to its central location in multiple signaling cascades. Using in-vitro and in-vivo models, we show that aPKCλ functions as a critical node in GBM signaling as both cell-autonomous and non-cell-autonomous signaling converge on aPKCλ resulting in pathogenic downstream effects. This dissertation aims to uncover the molecular mechanisms involved in cell signaling pathways which are responsible for critical cellular effects such as proliferation, invasion and transcriptional regulation. === Dissertation/Thesis === Ph.D. Neuroscience 2014
author2 Kusne, Yael N. (Author)
author_facet Kusne, Yael N. (Author)
title The Dissection of Signaling Cascades in Neural Stem Cell Proliferation & GBM Promotion
title_short The Dissection of Signaling Cascades in Neural Stem Cell Proliferation & GBM Promotion
title_full The Dissection of Signaling Cascades in Neural Stem Cell Proliferation & GBM Promotion
title_fullStr The Dissection of Signaling Cascades in Neural Stem Cell Proliferation & GBM Promotion
title_full_unstemmed The Dissection of Signaling Cascades in Neural Stem Cell Proliferation & GBM Promotion
title_sort dissection of signaling cascades in neural stem cell proliferation & gbm promotion
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.25048
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