Cilengitide modulates attachment and viability of human glioma cells, but not sensitivity to irradiation or temozolomide in vitro.

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_D862500F5073
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Cilengitide modulates attachment and viability of human glioma cells, but not sensitivity to irradiation or temozolomide in vitro.
Journal
Neuro-oncology
Author(s)
Maurer Gabriele D., Tritschler Isabel, Adams Barbara, Tabatabai Ghazaleh, Wick Wolfgang, Stupp Roger, Weller Michael
ISSN
1523-5866[electronic]
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2009
Volume
11
Number
6
Pages
747-756
Language
english
Abstract
Cilengitide is a cyclic peptide antagonist of integrins alphavbeta3 and alphavbeta5 that is currently being evaluated as a novel therapeutic agent for recurrent and newly diagnosed glioblastoma. Its mode of action is thought to be mainly antiangiogenic but may include direct effects on tumor cells, notably on attachment, migration, invasion, and viability. In this study we found that, at clinically relevant concentrations, cilengitide (1-100 microM) induces detachment in some but not all glioma cell lines, while the effect on cell viability is modest. Detachment induced by cilengitide could not be predicted by the level of expression of the cilengitide target molecules, alphavbeta3 and alphavbeta5, at the cell surface. Glioma cell death induced by cilengitide was associated with the generation of caspase activity, but caspase activity was not required for cell death since ectopic expression of cytokine response modifier (crm)-A or coexposure to the broad-spectrum caspase inhibitor zVAD-fmk was not protective. Moreover, forced expression of the antiapoptotic protein marker Bcl-X(L) or altering the p53 status did not modulate cilengitide-induced cell death. No consistent effects of cilengitide on glioma cell migration or invasiveness were observed in vitro. Preliminary clinical results indicate a preferential benefit from cilengitide added to temozolomide-based radiochemotherapy in patients with O(6)-methylguanine DNA methyltransferase (MGMT) gene promoter methylation. Accordingly, we also examined whether the MGMT status determines glioma cell responses to cilengitide alone or in combination with temozolomide. Neither ectopic expression of MGMT in MGMT-negative cells nor silencing the MGMT gene in MGMT-positive cells altered glioma cell responses to cilengitide alone or to cilengitide in combination with temozolomide. These data suggest that the beneficial clinical effects derived from cilengitide in vivo may arise from altered perfusion, which promotes temozolomide delivery to glioma cells.
Keywords
Chemotherapy, Cilengitide, Glioma, Integrin, Temozolomide, Aspartic Acid Peptide, Malignant Glioma, Glioblastoma-Multiforme, Tumor-Cells, Integrin, Expression, Invasion, Alpha-V-Beta-3, Vitronectin, Apoptosis
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
08/01/2010 16:17
Last modification date
20/08/2019 16:57
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