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Selective Vulnerability of Senescent Glioblastoma Cells to BCL-XL Inhibition

Glioblastoma (GBM) is a rapidly fatal malignancy typically treated with radiation and temozolomide (TMZ), an alkylating chemotherapeutic. These cytotoxic therapies cause oxidative stress and DNA damage, yielding a senescent-like state of replicative arrest in surviving tumor cells. Unfortunately, re...

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Autores principales: Rahman, Masum, Olson, Ian, Mansour, Moustafa, Carlstrom, Lucas P., Sutiwisesak, Rujapope, Saber, Rehan, Rajani, Karishma, Warrington, Arthur E., Howard, Adam, Schroeder, Mark, Chen, Sisi, Decker, Paul A., Sananikone, Eliot F., Zhu, Yi, Tchkonia, Tamar, Parney, Ian F., Burma, Sandeep, Brown, Desmond, Rodriguez, Moses, Sarkaria, Jann N., Kirkland, James L., Burns, Terry C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Association for Cancer Research 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9196639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35191501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-21-0029
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author Rahman, Masum
Olson, Ian
Mansour, Moustafa
Carlstrom, Lucas P.
Sutiwisesak, Rujapope
Saber, Rehan
Rajani, Karishma
Warrington, Arthur E.
Howard, Adam
Schroeder, Mark
Chen, Sisi
Decker, Paul A.
Sananikone, Eliot F.
Zhu, Yi
Tchkonia, Tamar
Parney, Ian F.
Burma, Sandeep
Brown, Desmond
Rodriguez, Moses
Sarkaria, Jann N.
Kirkland, James L.
Burns, Terry C.
author_facet Rahman, Masum
Olson, Ian
Mansour, Moustafa
Carlstrom, Lucas P.
Sutiwisesak, Rujapope
Saber, Rehan
Rajani, Karishma
Warrington, Arthur E.
Howard, Adam
Schroeder, Mark
Chen, Sisi
Decker, Paul A.
Sananikone, Eliot F.
Zhu, Yi
Tchkonia, Tamar
Parney, Ian F.
Burma, Sandeep
Brown, Desmond
Rodriguez, Moses
Sarkaria, Jann N.
Kirkland, James L.
Burns, Terry C.
author_sort Rahman, Masum
collection PubMed
description Glioblastoma (GBM) is a rapidly fatal malignancy typically treated with radiation and temozolomide (TMZ), an alkylating chemotherapeutic. These cytotoxic therapies cause oxidative stress and DNA damage, yielding a senescent-like state of replicative arrest in surviving tumor cells. Unfortunately, recurrence is inevitable and may be driven by surviving tumor cells eventually escaping senescence. A growing number of so-called “senolytic” drugs have been recently identified that are defined by their ability to selectively eliminate senescent cells. A growing inventory of senolytic drugs is under consideration for several diseases associated with aging, inflammation, DNA damage, as well as cancer. Ablation of senescent tumor cells after radiation and chemotherapy could help mitigate recurrence by decreasing the burden of residual tumor cells at risk of recurrence. This strategy has not been previously explored for GBM. We evaluated a panel of 10 previously described senolytic drugs to determine whether any could exhibit selective activity against human GBM persisting after exposure to radiation or TMZ. Three of the 10 drugs have known activity against BCL-XL and preferentially induced apoptosis in radiated or TMZ-treated glioma. This senolytic activity was observed in 12 of 12 human GBM cell lines. Efficacy could not be replicated with BCL-2 inhibition or senolytic agents acting against other putative senolytic targets. Knockdown of BCL-XL decreased survival of radiated GBM cells, whereas knockdown of BCL-2 or BCL-W yielded no senolytic effect. IMPLICATIONS: These findings imply that molecularly heterogeneous GBM lines share selective senescence-induced BCL-XL dependency increase the significance and translational relevance of the senolytic therapy for latent glioma.
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spelling pubmed-91966392022-06-14 Selective Vulnerability of Senescent Glioblastoma Cells to BCL-XL Inhibition Rahman, Masum Olson, Ian Mansour, Moustafa Carlstrom, Lucas P. Sutiwisesak, Rujapope Saber, Rehan Rajani, Karishma Warrington, Arthur E. Howard, Adam Schroeder, Mark Chen, Sisi Decker, Paul A. Sananikone, Eliot F. Zhu, Yi Tchkonia, Tamar Parney, Ian F. Burma, Sandeep Brown, Desmond Rodriguez, Moses Sarkaria, Jann N. Kirkland, James L. Burns, Terry C. Mol Cancer Res New Horizons in Cancer Biology Glioblastoma (GBM) is a rapidly fatal malignancy typically treated with radiation and temozolomide (TMZ), an alkylating chemotherapeutic. These cytotoxic therapies cause oxidative stress and DNA damage, yielding a senescent-like state of replicative arrest in surviving tumor cells. Unfortunately, recurrence is inevitable and may be driven by surviving tumor cells eventually escaping senescence. A growing number of so-called “senolytic” drugs have been recently identified that are defined by their ability to selectively eliminate senescent cells. A growing inventory of senolytic drugs is under consideration for several diseases associated with aging, inflammation, DNA damage, as well as cancer. Ablation of senescent tumor cells after radiation and chemotherapy could help mitigate recurrence by decreasing the burden of residual tumor cells at risk of recurrence. This strategy has not been previously explored for GBM. We evaluated a panel of 10 previously described senolytic drugs to determine whether any could exhibit selective activity against human GBM persisting after exposure to radiation or TMZ. Three of the 10 drugs have known activity against BCL-XL and preferentially induced apoptosis in radiated or TMZ-treated glioma. This senolytic activity was observed in 12 of 12 human GBM cell lines. Efficacy could not be replicated with BCL-2 inhibition or senolytic agents acting against other putative senolytic targets. Knockdown of BCL-XL decreased survival of radiated GBM cells, whereas knockdown of BCL-2 or BCL-W yielded no senolytic effect. IMPLICATIONS: These findings imply that molecularly heterogeneous GBM lines share selective senescence-induced BCL-XL dependency increase the significance and translational relevance of the senolytic therapy for latent glioma. American Association for Cancer Research 2022-06-03 2022-02-21 /pmc/articles/PMC9196639/ /pubmed/35191501 http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-21-0029 Text en ©2022 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This open access article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-ND 4.0) license.
spellingShingle New Horizons in Cancer Biology
Rahman, Masum
Olson, Ian
Mansour, Moustafa
Carlstrom, Lucas P.
Sutiwisesak, Rujapope
Saber, Rehan
Rajani, Karishma
Warrington, Arthur E.
Howard, Adam
Schroeder, Mark
Chen, Sisi
Decker, Paul A.
Sananikone, Eliot F.
Zhu, Yi
Tchkonia, Tamar
Parney, Ian F.
Burma, Sandeep
Brown, Desmond
Rodriguez, Moses
Sarkaria, Jann N.
Kirkland, James L.
Burns, Terry C.
Selective Vulnerability of Senescent Glioblastoma Cells to BCL-XL Inhibition
title Selective Vulnerability of Senescent Glioblastoma Cells to BCL-XL Inhibition
title_full Selective Vulnerability of Senescent Glioblastoma Cells to BCL-XL Inhibition
title_fullStr Selective Vulnerability of Senescent Glioblastoma Cells to BCL-XL Inhibition
title_full_unstemmed Selective Vulnerability of Senescent Glioblastoma Cells to BCL-XL Inhibition
title_short Selective Vulnerability of Senescent Glioblastoma Cells to BCL-XL Inhibition
title_sort selective vulnerability of senescent glioblastoma cells to bcl-xl inhibition
topic New Horizons in Cancer Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9196639/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35191501
http://dx.doi.org/10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-21-0029
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