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Scientists create animal model for paediatric brain tumour

14 Apr 2016
Scientists create animal model for paediatric brain tumour

Sanford Research scientists are published in Nature Cell Biology for their work developing a model to explore therapies for a paediatric brain tumour known as choroid plexus carcinoma.

Haotian Zhao, Ph.D., is the lead author on the study titled "Sonic Hedgehog promotes proliferation of Notch-dependent monociliated choroid plexus tumour cells." Zhao is an associate scientist in the Children's Health Research Center at Sanford Research. 

Zhao and his team created an animal model that forms tumours in a part of the brain known as the choroid plexus.

Using this model, which has increased levels of a key developmental protein called NOTCH, they discovered a new genetic pathway involved in the development of this portions of the brain.

The cells of the choroid plexus are unusual because they contain multiple primary cilia, hair-like projections from the cell that are important for detecting changes in their environment, signalling through a protein called Sonic Hedgehog.

The study showed that the tumour cells only contain one cilium and have disrupted Sonic Hedgehog signalling, which drives tumour-cell growth. Because Sonic Hedgehog might be an indicator of tumour growth, targeting this protein could be clinically beneficial for choroid plexus carcinoma treatment.

Source: Sanford Health/Sanford Research