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1.
J Exp Clin Cancer Res ; 42(1): 118, 2023 May 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37161450

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The failure of novel therapies effective in preclinical animal models largely reflects the fact that current models do not really mimic the pathological/therapeutic features of glioblastoma (GBM), in which the most effective temozolomide chemoradiotherapy (RT/TMZ) regimen can only slightly extend survival. How to improve RT/TMZ efficacy remains a major challenge in clinic. METHODS: Syngeneic G422TN-GBM model mice were subject to RT/TMZ, surgery, piperlongumine (PL), αPD1, glutathione. Metabolomics or transcriptomics data from G422TN-GBM and human GBM were used for gene enrichment analysis and estimation of ROS generation/scavenging balance, oxidative stress damage, inflammation and immune cell infiltration. Overall survival, bioluminescent imaging, immunohistochemistry, and immunofluorescence staining were used to examine therapeutic efficacy and mechanisms of action. RESULTS: Here we identified that glutathione metabolism was most significantly altered in metabolomics analysis upon RT/TMZ therapies in a truly refractory and reliable mouse triple-negative GBM (G422TN) preclinical model. Consistently, ROS generators/scavengers were highly dysregulated in both G422TN-tumor and human GBM. The ROS-inducer PL synergized surgery/TMZ, surgery/RT/TMZ or RT/TMZ to achieve long-term survival (LTS) in G422TN-mice, but only one LTS-mouse from RT/TMZ/PL therapy passed the rechallenging phase (immune cure). Furthermore, the immunotherapy of RT/TMZ/PL plus anti-PD-1 antibody (αPD1) doubled LTS (50%) and immune-cured (25%) mice. Glutathione completely abolished PL-synergistic effects. Mechanistically, ROS reduction was associated with RT/TMZ-resistance. PL restored ROS level (mainly via reversing Duox2/Gpx2), activated oxidative stress/inflammation/immune responses signature genes, reduced cancer cell proliferation/invasion, increased apoptosis and CD3+/CD4+/CD8+ T-lymphocytes in G422TN-tumor on the basis of RT/TMZ regimen. CONCLUSION: Our findings demonstrate that PL reverses RT/TMZ-reduced ROS and synergistically resets tumor microenvironment to cure GBM. RT/TMZ/PL or RT/TMZ/PL/αPD1 exacts effective immune cure in refractory GBM, deserving a priority for clinical trials.


Subject(s)
Glioblastoma , Glioma , Humans , Animals , Mice , Glioblastoma/drug therapy , Temozolomide/pharmacology , Temozolomide/therapeutic use , Reactive Oxygen Species , CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes , Oxidative Stress , Chemoradiotherapy , Tumor Microenvironment
2.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun ; 569: 1-9, 2021 09 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34216991

ABSTRACT

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common primary malignant brain tumor without curable therapy. Surgical resection remains the first choice of patients with GBM but tumors relapse rapidly even combined with conventional chemoradiotherapy. The mechanism of GBM rapid recurrence is poorly understood, which is largely due to the lack of an appropriate animal model, thus heavily impedes the improvement of postoperative therapy. Here we established a highly reproducible mouse GBM surgical model by using the syngeneic G422TN-GBM cells, which faithfully recapitulates the features of rapid recurrence of human GBM after surgery. Implanting 2 × 103-5 × 104 of G422TN-GBM cells in mouse cerebral cortex caused death in all animal within 23 days, while surgery was an effective therapy but not curable. After complete removal of visible tumors on day 5-9 of tumor growth, the tumors recurred macroscopically within 5 days accompanied by increasing infiltrative cancer foci. Mechanistically, the rapid recurrence of resected tumors was positively correlated to early Akt activation, which subsequently upregulated PD-L1/Vimentin and promoted proliferation/migration of cancer cells. In addition, environmental astrocytic activation with strong PD-L1 signal was prominent. Taken together, we provided a novel GBM surgical recurrence model for preclinical studies and suggested complicated recurring mechanisms involving in strong oncogenic signaling as well as immune inhibitory signals from both GBM cells and their neighboring astrocytes.


Subject(s)
B7-H1 Antigen/metabolism , Brain Neoplasms/metabolism , Glioblastoma/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins c-akt/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Vimentin/metabolism , Animals , Brain Neoplasms/surgery , Brain Neoplasms/therapy , Cell Line, Tumor , Combined Modality Therapy , Disease Models, Animal , Glioblastoma/surgery , Glioblastoma/therapy , Humans , Kaplan-Meier Estimate , Male , Mice , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Neoplasm Recurrence, Local
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