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. 2020 Nov 9;22(Suppl 2):ii17–ii18. doi: 10.1093/neuonc/noaa215.071

CBIO-11. NOVEL THERAPY TO TARGET PR-RECURRENT GLIOMA

Masum Rahman 1, Ian E Olson 1, Rehan Saber 2, Jibo Zhang 1, Lucas P Carlstrom 1, Chen Sisi 2, Karishma Rajani 1, Desmond Brown 2, Ian Parney 2, Jann Sarkaria 2, Terry C Burns 1
PMCID: PMC7650398

Abstract

BACKGROUND

Glioblastoma is a fatal infiltrative primary brain tumor, and standard care includes maximal safe surgical resection followed by radiation and Temozolomide (TMZ). Therapy-resistant residual cells persist in a latent state a long time before inevitable recurrence. Conventional radiation and Temozolomide (TMZ) treatment cause oxidative stress and DNA damage resulting senescent-like state of cell-cycle arrest. However, increasing evidence demonstrates escaping senescence leads to tumor recurrence. Thus, the ablation of senescent tumor cells after chemoradiation may be an avenue to limit tumor recurrence.

METHODS

100uM TMZ for 7days or 10-20Gy radiation (cesium gamma radiator) was used for senescence induction in human glioblastoma in vitro and confirmed by SA-Beta gal staining and PCR. Replication arrest assessed by automated quantification of cellular confluence (Thermo Scientific Series 8000 WJ Incubator). We evaluated the IC50 for several senolytics targeting multiple SCAPs, including Dasatinib, Quercetin, AMG-232, Fisetin, Onalespib, Navitoclax, and A1331852, and in senescent vs. proliferating cells.

RESULTS

Among the senolytic tested, the Bcl-XL inhibitors A1331852 and Navitoclax both shown senolytic effect by selectively killing radiated, senescent tumor cells at lower concentrations as compared to 0Gy treated non-senescent cells. Across 12 GBM cell lines, IC50 for senescent cells was 6–500 times lower than non-senescent GBM(p< 0.005). Such differential sensitivity to Bcl-XL inhibition after radiation has also observed by BCL-XL knockdown in radiated glioma.

CONCLUSION

These findings suggest the potential to harness radiation-induced biology to ablate surviving quiescent cells and demonstrate Bcl-XL dependency as a potential vulnerability of surviving tumor cells after exposure to chemoradiation.


Articles from Neuro-Oncology are provided here courtesy of Society for Neuro-Oncology and Oxford University Press

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