Richard Drexler,Belgin Yalçın,Rebecca Mancusi,Abigail Rogers,Kiarash Shamardani,Pamelyn J. Woo,Alexandre Ravel,Samuel Wu,Yahaya A Yabo,Carlos Alberto Oliveira de Biagi-Junior,Claudia Lo Cascio,Robert C. Malenka,Boris D. Heifets,Jenna LaBelle,Dieter Henrik Heiland,Karl Deisseroth,Michelle Monje,Michelle Monje
Abstract High-grade gliomas are lethal brain cancers that are powerfully regulated by glutamatergic neurons through activity-dependent paracrine factors and functional neuron-to-glioma synapses. Here, we report that serotonergic neurons promote the proliferation of high-grade gliomas throughout the brain. Serotonergic neuronal activity drives circuit-specific increases in high-grade glioma proliferation, calcium transients, and reduced survival. This growth-promoting effect is chiefly mediated by activation of the serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5HT) receptor 5HT 2A on glioma cells. Knock out or pharmacological blockade of 5HT 2A receptors in glioma abrogated the glioma growth-promoting effects of serotonergic neuronal activity, while serotonergic psychedelic drugs robustly promote malignant cell proliferation. Gliomas alter serotonergic neuronal activity patterns, resulting in elevated serotonin release into the tumor microenvironment. Together, these findings uncover pathogenic, feed-forward interactions between serotonergic neurons and glioma cells.