Mechanistic research revealed a negative feedback loop between ATP1A3 and AQP4 through which CS-6 inhibited GBM growth and mediated the synergistic treatment effect of CS-6 and TMZ.
While some degree of AQP4 expression was detected in all 22 cases (39 samples), there was no clear relationship between staining pattern and disease status (active versus inactive GBM) between baseline and time of repeat biopsy.
TEAD1 overexpression restores AQP4 expression, and both TEAD1 and AQP4 overexpression rescue migratory deficits in TEAD1-knockout cells, implicating a direct regulatory role for TEAD1-AQP4 in GBM migration.
Recently, monoclonal human IgG antibodies against extracellular aquaporin-4 domains have become available and could be engineered to kill aquaporin-4 over-expressing cells in the malignant brain tumor glioblastoma.
Enhancing BRGs (EBRG) exhibited MRI enhancement, a long-established criterion for glioblastoma progression, and expressed mitogen-activated protein kinases, neural cell adhesion molecule-1 (NCAM-1), and aquaporin 4.
Hence, AQP4 redistribution may go along with other tumor properties, such as vascular proliferation and resulting blood-brain barrier disturbance, features usually prominent in pilocytic astrocytomas WHO I and glioblastomas WHO grade IV.