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Hypoxia Enhances the Antiglioma Cytotoxicity of B10, a Glycosylated Derivative of Betulinic Acid

B10 is a glycosylated derivative of betulinic acid with promising activity against glioma cells. Lysosomal cell death pathways appear to be essential for its cytotoxicity. We investigated the influence of hypoxia, nutrient deprivation and current standard therapies on B10 cytotoxicity. The human gli...

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Autores principales: Fischer, Sebastian, Ronellenfitsch, Michael W., Thiepold, Anna-Luisa, Harter, Patrick N., Reichert, Sebastian, Kögel, Donat, Paschke, Reinhard, Mittelbronn, Michel, Weller, Michael, Steinbach, Joachim P., Fulda, Simone, Bähr, Oliver
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3990545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24743710
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094921
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author Fischer, Sebastian
Ronellenfitsch, Michael W.
Thiepold, Anna-Luisa
Harter, Patrick N.
Reichert, Sebastian
Kögel, Donat
Paschke, Reinhard
Mittelbronn, Michel
Weller, Michael
Steinbach, Joachim P.
Fulda, Simone
Bähr, Oliver
author_facet Fischer, Sebastian
Ronellenfitsch, Michael W.
Thiepold, Anna-Luisa
Harter, Patrick N.
Reichert, Sebastian
Kögel, Donat
Paschke, Reinhard
Mittelbronn, Michel
Weller, Michael
Steinbach, Joachim P.
Fulda, Simone
Bähr, Oliver
author_sort Fischer, Sebastian
collection PubMed
description B10 is a glycosylated derivative of betulinic acid with promising activity against glioma cells. Lysosomal cell death pathways appear to be essential for its cytotoxicity. We investigated the influence of hypoxia, nutrient deprivation and current standard therapies on B10 cytotoxicity. The human glioma cell lines LN-308 and LNT-229 were exposed to B10 alone or together with irradiation, temozolomide, nutrient deprivation or hypoxia. Cell growth and viability were evaluated by crystal violet staining, clonogenicity assays, propidium iodide uptake and LDH release assays. Cell death was examined using an inhibitor of lysosomal acidification (bafilomycin A1), a cathepsin inhibitor (CA074-Me) and a short-hairpin RNA targeting cathepsin B. Hypoxia substantially enhanced B10-induced cell death. This effect was sensitive to bafilomycin A1 and thus dependent on hypoxia-induced lysosomal acidification. Cathepsin B appeared to mediate cell death because either the inhibitor CA074-Me or cathepsin B gene silencing rescued glioma cells from B10 toxicity under hypoxia. B10 is a novel antitumor agent with substantially enhanced cytotoxicity under hypoxia conferred by increased lysosomal cell death pathway activation. Given the importance of hypoxia for therapy resistance, malignant progression, and as a result of antiangiogenic therapies, B10 might be a promising strategy for hypoxic tumors like malignant glioma.
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spelling pubmed-39905452014-04-21 Hypoxia Enhances the Antiglioma Cytotoxicity of B10, a Glycosylated Derivative of Betulinic Acid Fischer, Sebastian Ronellenfitsch, Michael W. Thiepold, Anna-Luisa Harter, Patrick N. Reichert, Sebastian Kögel, Donat Paschke, Reinhard Mittelbronn, Michel Weller, Michael Steinbach, Joachim P. Fulda, Simone Bähr, Oliver PLoS One Research Article B10 is a glycosylated derivative of betulinic acid with promising activity against glioma cells. Lysosomal cell death pathways appear to be essential for its cytotoxicity. We investigated the influence of hypoxia, nutrient deprivation and current standard therapies on B10 cytotoxicity. The human glioma cell lines LN-308 and LNT-229 were exposed to B10 alone or together with irradiation, temozolomide, nutrient deprivation or hypoxia. Cell growth and viability were evaluated by crystal violet staining, clonogenicity assays, propidium iodide uptake and LDH release assays. Cell death was examined using an inhibitor of lysosomal acidification (bafilomycin A1), a cathepsin inhibitor (CA074-Me) and a short-hairpin RNA targeting cathepsin B. Hypoxia substantially enhanced B10-induced cell death. This effect was sensitive to bafilomycin A1 and thus dependent on hypoxia-induced lysosomal acidification. Cathepsin B appeared to mediate cell death because either the inhibitor CA074-Me or cathepsin B gene silencing rescued glioma cells from B10 toxicity under hypoxia. B10 is a novel antitumor agent with substantially enhanced cytotoxicity under hypoxia conferred by increased lysosomal cell death pathway activation. Given the importance of hypoxia for therapy resistance, malignant progression, and as a result of antiangiogenic therapies, B10 might be a promising strategy for hypoxic tumors like malignant glioma. Public Library of Science 2014-04-17 /pmc/articles/PMC3990545/ /pubmed/24743710 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094921 Text en © 2014 Fischer et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ 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 properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Fischer, Sebastian
Ronellenfitsch, Michael W.
Thiepold, Anna-Luisa
Harter, Patrick N.
Reichert, Sebastian
Kögel, Donat
Paschke, Reinhard
Mittelbronn, Michel
Weller, Michael
Steinbach, Joachim P.
Fulda, Simone
Bähr, Oliver
Hypoxia Enhances the Antiglioma Cytotoxicity of B10, a Glycosylated Derivative of Betulinic Acid
title Hypoxia Enhances the Antiglioma Cytotoxicity of B10, a Glycosylated Derivative of Betulinic Acid
title_full Hypoxia Enhances the Antiglioma Cytotoxicity of B10, a Glycosylated Derivative of Betulinic Acid
title_fullStr Hypoxia Enhances the Antiglioma Cytotoxicity of B10, a Glycosylated Derivative of Betulinic Acid
title_full_unstemmed Hypoxia Enhances the Antiglioma Cytotoxicity of B10, a Glycosylated Derivative of Betulinic Acid
title_short Hypoxia Enhances the Antiglioma Cytotoxicity of B10, a Glycosylated Derivative of Betulinic Acid
title_sort hypoxia enhances the antiglioma cytotoxicity of b10, a glycosylated derivative of betulinic acid
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3990545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24743710
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094921
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