The two main challenges in the clinical management of paediatric brain tumours are improving survival and reducing long-term detriments due to treatment toxicities, especially from craniospinal radiotherapy. The overall aim of this project is to improve survival of medulloblastoma, the most common paediatric brain malignancy, through better understanding of the biology underlying tumour initiation and progression.
Medulloblastoma is suggested to originate from specific cells in the small brain, cerebellum, and can be classified into four defined subgroups called: WNT, SHH, Group 3 and Group 4. MYC proteins such as MYC and MYCN are transcription factors that are mis-regulated in more than half of all types of human cancer including medulloblastoma. We have generated sophisticated regulatable transgenic animal models that overexpress MYC proteins. These models carefully resemble at least two of the four defined subgroups of human medulloblastoma. In this proposal we intend to use the models to identify the specific cell type these brain tumours originates from. We also aim to refine our medulloblastoma models and develop novel models to define and study cells involved in brain metastasis and tumour recurrence, the main causes of death in brain tumour patients.
We have managed to culture normal human cerebellar stem cells and we next plan to model human medulloblastoma development in these cells by overexpressing oncogenes, or silencing suppressor genes, that are defined as clinically relevant medulloblastoma drivers. We will use a forward genetics screen to identify novel drivers and specifiers of subtypes of medulloblastoma. We hope these combined efforts will help us better understand human medulloblastoma formation and we expect to generate tumours that correlate well, both pathologically and molecularly, with primary cell cultures derived from medulloblastoma patients. Our data will subsequently be used to provide novel targets for therapeutic intervention which will hopefully be benificial for patients affected by this devastating disease.