Deeper and Deeper on the Role of BK and Kir4.1 Channels in Glioblastoma Invasiveness: A Novel Summative Mechanism?
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2020
Abstract:
In the last decades, increasing evidence has revealed that a large number of channel
protein and ion pumps exhibit impaired expression in cancers. This dysregulation is
responsible for high proliferative rates as well as migration and invasiveness, reflected in
the recently coined term oncochannelopathies. In glioblastoma (GBM), the most invasive
and aggressive primary brain tumor, GBM cells modify their ionic equilibrium in order to
change their volume as a necessary step prior to migration. This mechanism involves
increased expression of BK channels and downregulation of the normally widespread
Kir4.1 channels, as noted in GBM biopsies from patients. Despite a large body of work
implicating BK channels in migration in response to an artificial intracellular calcium rise,
little is known about how this channel acts in GBM cells at resting membrane potential
(RMP), as compared to other channels that are constitutively open, such as Kir4.1. In this
review we propose that a residual fraction of functionally active Kir4.1 channels mediates
a small, but continuous, efflux of potassium at the more depolarized RMP of GBM cells.
In addition, coinciding with transient membrane deformation and the intracellular rise
in calcium concentration, brief activity of BK channels can induce massive and rapid
cytosolic water loss that reduces cell volume (cell shrinkage), a necessary step for
migration within the brain parenchyma.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
glioblastoma, Kir4.1, BK channel, cancer, channelopathy
Elenco autori:
Brandalise, Federico; Ratto, Daniela; Leone, Roberta; Olivero, Federico; Roda, Elisa; Locatelli, Carlo Alessandro; Grazia Bottone, Maria; Rossi, Paola
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