Temozolomide-induced increase of tumorigenicity can be diminished by targeting of mitochondria in in vitro models of patient individual glioblastoma

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Abstract

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is a highly heterogeneous and aggressive brain tumor with a dismal prognosis. Development of resistance towards cytostatic drugs like the GBM standard drug temozolomide is a severe problem in GBM treatment. One potential source of GBM relapse could be so called cancer stem like cells (CSCs). These represent an undifferentiated subpopulation of cells with high potential for tumor initiation. Furthermore, it has been shown that differentiated GBM cells can regain CSC properties when exposed to continuous temozolomide treatment in vitro. In this study, treatment of several primary GBM cell lines with clinically relevant doses of temozolomide increased their tumorigenicity as determined by colony formation assays in soft agar. Increased tumorigenicity is a known property of CSCs. Hence, therapy options that specifically target CSCs are under investigation. CSCs appear to be particularly dependent on mitochondria biogenesis which may represent a useful target for CSC elimination. Toxicity towards mitochondria is a known side effect of several antibiotics. Thus, addition of antibiotics like doxycycline may represent a useful tool to inhibit CSCs in GBM. Here, we show that combining temozolomide treatment of primary GBM cells with doxycycline could counteract the increase of tumorigenicity induced by temozolomide treatment.

Figures

  • Fig 1. Sensitivity of patient individual GBM cell lines towards TMZ and Dox. Results are given as median values of 4 independent experiments in triplicates. Error bars represent the standard deviation, Ctrl: untreated cells, TMZ: 50μM temozolomide, Dox: 50μM doxycycline, T+D: combination treatment with temozolomide and doxycycline (50μM each), p<0.05, Mann Whitney Rank sum test.
  • Fig 2. TMZ treatment of non-CSCs leads to increased tumorigenicity in vitrowhich can be diminished by combination treatment with Dox. Tumorigenicity of GBM cell lines after treatment with TMZ, Dox or a combination of both drugs in vitro, p<0.05, p<0.001, Mann Whitney rank sum test.
  • Fig 3. Nestin and CD15 expression after in vitro treatment with TMZ, Dox and a combination of both drugs. Upper panels show western blot analysis of GBM non-CSCs under different treatment conditions (50μM TMZ, 50μM Dox or 50μM each), Tubulin represents the loading control. Lower panels are results from densitometric scanning analyses of the western blot signals. Results are given as relative expression to untreated control cells.
  • Fig 4. Mitochondria content of GBM non-CSCs can be affected by temozolomide and doxycycline treatment. A) Quantification of mitochondria amount in GBM cell lines via qPCR analysis of mitochondrial DNA in relation to nuclear DNA under different treatment conditions, results are depicted as mean values of 3 independent experiments in triplicates, error bars indicate the standard deviation; p<0.05, p<0.001; B) Fluorescence staining of mitochondria in GBM cell lines under different treatment conditions.
  • Fig 5. CD15 expression is increased in clinical samples of two relapsed GBM. IHC staining of nestin and CD15 in clinical samples of two cases pre and post chemotherapy with TMZ, 200x magnification.

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William, D., Walther, M., Schneider, B., Linnebacher, M., & Classen, C. F. (2018). Temozolomide-induced increase of tumorigenicity can be diminished by targeting of mitochondria in in vitro models of patient individual glioblastoma. PLoS ONE, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0191511

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