BackgroundCombined chemoradiation offers a promising therapeutic strategy for dogs with glioma. The alkylating agents temozolomide (TMZ) and lomustine (CCNU) penetrate the blood-brain barrier, and doses for dogs are established. Whether such combinations are clinically advantageous remains to be explored together with tumour-specific markers. ObjectiveTo investigate if triple combination of lomustine, temozolomide and irradiation reduces canine glioma cell survival in vitro. MethodsWe evaluated the sensitising effect of CCNU alone and in combination with TMZ-irradiation in canine glioma J3T-BG cells and long-term drug-exposed subclones by using clonogenic survival and proliferation assays. Bisulphite-SEQ and Western Blot were used to investigate molecular alterations. ResultsTMZ (200 & mu;M) or CCNU alone (5 & mu;M) reduced the irradiated survival fraction (4 Gy) from 60% to 38% (p = 0.0074) and 26% (p = 0.0002), respectively. The double-drug combination reduced the irradiated survival fraction (4 Gy) more potently to 12% (p < 0.0001).After long-term drug exposure, both subclones show higher IC50 values against CCNU and TMZ. For CCNU-resistant cells, both, single-drug CCNU (p = 0.0006) and TMZ (p = 0.0326) treatment combined with irradiation (4 Gy) remained effective. The double-drug-irradiation combination reduced the cell survival by 86% (p < 0.0001), compared to 92% in the parental (nonresistant) cell line. For TMZ-resistant cells, only the double-drug combination with irradiation (4 Gy) reduced the cell survival by 88% (p = 0.0057) while single-drug treatment lost efficacy.Chemoresistant cell lines demonstrated higher P-gp expression while MGMT-methylation profile analysis showed a general high methylation level in the parental and long-term treated cell lines. ConclusionsOur findings indicate that combining CCNU with TMZ-irradiation significantly reduces canine glioma cell survival. Such a combination could overcome current challenges of therapeutic resistance to improve overall patient survival.

Triple combination of lomustine, temozolomide and irradiation reduces canine glioma cell survival in vitro / Fuchs, Daniel; Rohrer Bley, Carla; Morandi, Luca; Tonon, Caterina; Weyland, Mathias S; Nytko, Katarzyna J. - In: VETERINARY MEDICINE AND SCIENCE. - ISSN 2053-1095. - STAMPA. - 9:4(2023), pp. 1573-1583. [10.1002/vms3.1181]

Triple combination of lomustine, temozolomide and irradiation reduces canine glioma cell survival in vitro

Morandi, Luca;Tonon, Caterina;
2023

Abstract

BackgroundCombined chemoradiation offers a promising therapeutic strategy for dogs with glioma. The alkylating agents temozolomide (TMZ) and lomustine (CCNU) penetrate the blood-brain barrier, and doses for dogs are established. Whether such combinations are clinically advantageous remains to be explored together with tumour-specific markers. ObjectiveTo investigate if triple combination of lomustine, temozolomide and irradiation reduces canine glioma cell survival in vitro. MethodsWe evaluated the sensitising effect of CCNU alone and in combination with TMZ-irradiation in canine glioma J3T-BG cells and long-term drug-exposed subclones by using clonogenic survival and proliferation assays. Bisulphite-SEQ and Western Blot were used to investigate molecular alterations. ResultsTMZ (200 & mu;M) or CCNU alone (5 & mu;M) reduced the irradiated survival fraction (4 Gy) from 60% to 38% (p = 0.0074) and 26% (p = 0.0002), respectively. The double-drug combination reduced the irradiated survival fraction (4 Gy) more potently to 12% (p < 0.0001).After long-term drug exposure, both subclones show higher IC50 values against CCNU and TMZ. For CCNU-resistant cells, both, single-drug CCNU (p = 0.0006) and TMZ (p = 0.0326) treatment combined with irradiation (4 Gy) remained effective. The double-drug-irradiation combination reduced the cell survival by 86% (p < 0.0001), compared to 92% in the parental (nonresistant) cell line. For TMZ-resistant cells, only the double-drug combination with irradiation (4 Gy) reduced the cell survival by 88% (p = 0.0057) while single-drug treatment lost efficacy.Chemoresistant cell lines demonstrated higher P-gp expression while MGMT-methylation profile analysis showed a general high methylation level in the parental and long-term treated cell lines. ConclusionsOur findings indicate that combining CCNU with TMZ-irradiation significantly reduces canine glioma cell survival. Such a combination could overcome current challenges of therapeutic resistance to improve overall patient survival.
2023
Triple combination of lomustine, temozolomide and irradiation reduces canine glioma cell survival in vitro / Fuchs, Daniel; Rohrer Bley, Carla; Morandi, Luca; Tonon, Caterina; Weyland, Mathias S; Nytko, Katarzyna J. - In: VETERINARY MEDICINE AND SCIENCE. - ISSN 2053-1095. - STAMPA. - 9:4(2023), pp. 1573-1583. [10.1002/vms3.1181]
Fuchs, Daniel; Rohrer Bley, Carla; Morandi, Luca; Tonon, Caterina; Weyland, Mathias S; Nytko, Katarzyna J
File in questo prodotto:
Eventuali allegati, non sono esposti

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/963573
 Attenzione

Attenzione! I dati visualizzati non sono stati sottoposti a validazione da parte dell'ateneo

Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? 1
  • Scopus 0
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 0
social impact