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Synergistic Effects of Crizotinib and Temozolomide in Experimental FIG-ROS1 Fusion-Positive Glioblastoma

Glioblastoma (GB) is the most common malignant brain tumor. Drug resistance frequently develops in these tumors during chemotherapy. Therefore, predicting drug response in these patients remains a major challenge in the clinic. Thus, to improve the clinical outcome, more effective and tolerable comb...

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Autores principales: Das, Arabinda, Cheng, Ron Ron, Hilbert, Megan L.T., Dixon-Moh, Yaenette N., Decandio, Michele, Vandergrift, William Alex, Banik, Naren L., Lindhorst, Scott M., Cachia, David, Varma, Abhay K., Patel, Sunil J., Giglio, Pierre
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Libertas Academica 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4667559/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26648752
http://dx.doi.org/10.4137/CGM.S32801
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author Das, Arabinda
Cheng, Ron Ron
Hilbert, Megan L.T.
Dixon-Moh, Yaenette N.
Decandio, Michele
Vandergrift, William Alex
Banik, Naren L.
Lindhorst, Scott M.
Cachia, David
Varma, Abhay K.
Patel, Sunil J.
Giglio, Pierre
author_facet Das, Arabinda
Cheng, Ron Ron
Hilbert, Megan L.T.
Dixon-Moh, Yaenette N.
Decandio, Michele
Vandergrift, William Alex
Banik, Naren L.
Lindhorst, Scott M.
Cachia, David
Varma, Abhay K.
Patel, Sunil J.
Giglio, Pierre
author_sort Das, Arabinda
collection PubMed
description Glioblastoma (GB) is the most common malignant brain tumor. Drug resistance frequently develops in these tumors during chemotherapy. Therefore, predicting drug response in these patients remains a major challenge in the clinic. Thus, to improve the clinical outcome, more effective and tolerable combination treatment strategies are needed. Robust experimental evidence has shown that the main reason for failure of treatments is signal redundancy due to coactivation of several functionally linked receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), including anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK), c-Met (hepatocyte growth factor receptor), and oncogenic c-ros oncogene1 (ROS1: RTK class orphan) fusion kinase FIG (fused in GB)-ROS1. As such, these could be attractive targets for GB therapy. The study subjects consisted of 19 patients who underwent neurosurgical resection of GB tissues. Our in vitro and ex vivo models promisingly demonstrated that treatments with crizotinib (PF-02341066: dual ALK/c-Met inhibitor) and temozolomide in combination induced synergistic antitumor activity on FIG-ROS1-positive GB cells. Our results also showed that ex vivo FIG-ROS1+ slices (obtained from GB patients) when cultured were able to preserve tissue architecture, cell viability, and global gene-expression profiles for up to 14 days. Both in vitro and ex vivo studies indicated that combination blockade of FIG, p-ROS1, p-ALK, and p-Met augmented apoptosis, which mechanistically involves activation of Bim and inhibition of survivin, p-Akt, and Mcl-1 expression. However, it is important to note that we did not see any significant synergistic effect of crizotinib and temozolomide on FIG-ROS1-negative GB cells. Thus, these ex vivo culture results will have a significant impact on patient selection for clinical trials and in predicting response to crizotinib and temozolomide therapy. Further studies in different animal models of FIG-ROS1-positive GB cells are warranted to determine useful therapies for the management of human GBs.
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spelling pubmed-46675592015-12-08 Synergistic Effects of Crizotinib and Temozolomide in Experimental FIG-ROS1 Fusion-Positive Glioblastoma Das, Arabinda Cheng, Ron Ron Hilbert, Megan L.T. Dixon-Moh, Yaenette N. Decandio, Michele Vandergrift, William Alex Banik, Naren L. Lindhorst, Scott M. Cachia, David Varma, Abhay K. Patel, Sunil J. Giglio, Pierre Cancer Growth Metastasis Original Research Glioblastoma (GB) is the most common malignant brain tumor. Drug resistance frequently develops in these tumors during chemotherapy. Therefore, predicting drug response in these patients remains a major challenge in the clinic. Thus, to improve the clinical outcome, more effective and tolerable combination treatment strategies are needed. Robust experimental evidence has shown that the main reason for failure of treatments is signal redundancy due to coactivation of several functionally linked receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs), including anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK), c-Met (hepatocyte growth factor receptor), and oncogenic c-ros oncogene1 (ROS1: RTK class orphan) fusion kinase FIG (fused in GB)-ROS1. As such, these could be attractive targets for GB therapy. The study subjects consisted of 19 patients who underwent neurosurgical resection of GB tissues. Our in vitro and ex vivo models promisingly demonstrated that treatments with crizotinib (PF-02341066: dual ALK/c-Met inhibitor) and temozolomide in combination induced synergistic antitumor activity on FIG-ROS1-positive GB cells. Our results also showed that ex vivo FIG-ROS1+ slices (obtained from GB patients) when cultured were able to preserve tissue architecture, cell viability, and global gene-expression profiles for up to 14 days. Both in vitro and ex vivo studies indicated that combination blockade of FIG, p-ROS1, p-ALK, and p-Met augmented apoptosis, which mechanistically involves activation of Bim and inhibition of survivin, p-Akt, and Mcl-1 expression. However, it is important to note that we did not see any significant synergistic effect of crizotinib and temozolomide on FIG-ROS1-negative GB cells. Thus, these ex vivo culture results will have a significant impact on patient selection for clinical trials and in predicting response to crizotinib and temozolomide therapy. Further studies in different animal models of FIG-ROS1-positive GB cells are warranted to determine useful therapies for the management of human GBs. Libertas Academica 2015-12-01 /pmc/articles/PMC4667559/ /pubmed/26648752 http://dx.doi.org/10.4137/CGM.S32801 Text en © 2015 the author(s), publisher and licensee Libertas Academica Ltd. This is an open access article published under the Creative Commons CC-BY-NC 3.0 license.
spellingShingle Original Research
Das, Arabinda
Cheng, Ron Ron
Hilbert, Megan L.T.
Dixon-Moh, Yaenette N.
Decandio, Michele
Vandergrift, William Alex
Banik, Naren L.
Lindhorst, Scott M.
Cachia, David
Varma, Abhay K.
Patel, Sunil J.
Giglio, Pierre
Synergistic Effects of Crizotinib and Temozolomide in Experimental FIG-ROS1 Fusion-Positive Glioblastoma
title Synergistic Effects of Crizotinib and Temozolomide in Experimental FIG-ROS1 Fusion-Positive Glioblastoma
title_full Synergistic Effects of Crizotinib and Temozolomide in Experimental FIG-ROS1 Fusion-Positive Glioblastoma
title_fullStr Synergistic Effects of Crizotinib and Temozolomide in Experimental FIG-ROS1 Fusion-Positive Glioblastoma
title_full_unstemmed Synergistic Effects of Crizotinib and Temozolomide in Experimental FIG-ROS1 Fusion-Positive Glioblastoma
title_short Synergistic Effects of Crizotinib and Temozolomide in Experimental FIG-ROS1 Fusion-Positive Glioblastoma
title_sort synergistic effects of crizotinib and temozolomide in experimental fig-ros1 fusion-positive glioblastoma
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4667559/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26648752
http://dx.doi.org/10.4137/CGM.S32801
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