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Disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide

Glioblastomas (GBM) are associated with high rates of relapse. These brain tumors are often resistant to chemotherapies like temozolomide (TMZ) and there are very few treatment options available to patients. We recently reported that polo-like kinase-1 (PLK1) is associated with the proliferative sub...

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Autores principales: Triscott, Joanna, Lee, Cathy, Hu, Kaiji, Fotovati, Abbas, Berns, Rachel, Pambid, Mary, Luk, Margaret, Kast, Richard E., Kong, Esther, Toyota, Eric, Yip, Stephen, Toyota, Brian, Dunn, Sandra E.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Impact Journals LLC 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3717961/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23047041
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author Triscott, Joanna
Lee, Cathy
Hu, Kaiji
Fotovati, Abbas
Berns, Rachel
Pambid, Mary
Luk, Margaret
Kast, Richard E.
Kong, Esther
Toyota, Eric
Yip, Stephen
Toyota, Brian
Dunn, Sandra E.
author_facet Triscott, Joanna
Lee, Cathy
Hu, Kaiji
Fotovati, Abbas
Berns, Rachel
Pambid, Mary
Luk, Margaret
Kast, Richard E.
Kong, Esther
Toyota, Eric
Yip, Stephen
Toyota, Brian
Dunn, Sandra E.
author_sort Triscott, Joanna
collection PubMed
description Glioblastomas (GBM) are associated with high rates of relapse. These brain tumors are often resistant to chemotherapies like temozolomide (TMZ) and there are very few treatment options available to patients. We recently reported that polo-like kinase-1 (PLK1) is associated with the proliferative subtype of GBM; which has the worst prognosis. In this study, we addressed the potential of repurposing disulfiram (DSF), a drug widely used to control alcoholism for the past six decades. DSF has good safety profiles and penetrates the blood-brain barrier. Here we report that DSF inhibited the growth of TMZ resistant GBM cells, (IC90=100 nM), but did not affect normal human astrocytes. At similar DSF concentrations, self-renewal was blocked by ~100% using neurosphere growth assays. Likewise the drug completely inhibited the self-renewal of the BT74 and GBM4 primary cell lines. Additionally, DSF suppressed growth and self-renewal of primary cells from two GBM tumors. These cells were resistant to TMZ, had unmethylated MGMT, and expressed high levels of PLK1. Consistent with its role in suppressing GBM growth, DSF inhibited the expression of PLK1 in GBM cells. Likewise, PLK1 inhibition with siRNA, or small molecules (BI-2536 or BI-6727) blocked growth of TMZ resistant cells. Our studies suggest that DSF has the potential to be repurposed for treatment of refractory GBM.
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spelling pubmed-37179612013-07-25 Disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide Triscott, Joanna Lee, Cathy Hu, Kaiji Fotovati, Abbas Berns, Rachel Pambid, Mary Luk, Margaret Kast, Richard E. Kong, Esther Toyota, Eric Yip, Stephen Toyota, Brian Dunn, Sandra E. Oncotarget Research: Complementary Reports Glioblastomas (GBM) are associated with high rates of relapse. These brain tumors are often resistant to chemotherapies like temozolomide (TMZ) and there are very few treatment options available to patients. We recently reported that polo-like kinase-1 (PLK1) is associated with the proliferative subtype of GBM; which has the worst prognosis. In this study, we addressed the potential of repurposing disulfiram (DSF), a drug widely used to control alcoholism for the past six decades. DSF has good safety profiles and penetrates the blood-brain barrier. Here we report that DSF inhibited the growth of TMZ resistant GBM cells, (IC90=100 nM), but did not affect normal human astrocytes. At similar DSF concentrations, self-renewal was blocked by ~100% using neurosphere growth assays. Likewise the drug completely inhibited the self-renewal of the BT74 and GBM4 primary cell lines. Additionally, DSF suppressed growth and self-renewal of primary cells from two GBM tumors. These cells were resistant to TMZ, had unmethylated MGMT, and expressed high levels of PLK1. Consistent with its role in suppressing GBM growth, DSF inhibited the expression of PLK1 in GBM cells. Likewise, PLK1 inhibition with siRNA, or small molecules (BI-2536 or BI-6727) blocked growth of TMZ resistant cells. Our studies suggest that DSF has the potential to be repurposed for treatment of refractory GBM. Impact Journals LLC 2012-10-08 /pmc/articles/PMC3717961/ /pubmed/23047041 Text en Copyright: © 2012 Triscott et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited
spellingShingle Research: Complementary Reports
Triscott, Joanna
Lee, Cathy
Hu, Kaiji
Fotovati, Abbas
Berns, Rachel
Pambid, Mary
Luk, Margaret
Kast, Richard E.
Kong, Esther
Toyota, Eric
Yip, Stephen
Toyota, Brian
Dunn, Sandra E.
Disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide
title Disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide
title_full Disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide
title_fullStr Disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide
title_full_unstemmed Disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide
title_short Disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide
title_sort disulfiram, a drug widely used to control alcoholism, suppresses self-renewal of glioblastoma and overrides resistance to temozolomide
topic Research: Complementary Reports
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3717961/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23047041
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