RESUMEN
Brain tumors are an important cause of suffering and death. Glioblastoma are the most frequent primary tumors of the central nervous system in adults. They are associated with a very poor prognosis, since only 10% of GBM patients survive 5 years after diagnosis. Medulloblastoma are the most frequent brain malignancies in childhood; they affect the cerebellum in children under 10 years of age in 75% of cases. The current multimodal treatment comes at the expense of serious and often long-lasting side effects. Herein, we propose the synthesis of a library of novel alkoxyamines as anticancer drug candidates. The most efficient molecule, ALK4, was selected based on its ability to inhibit both survival and migration of GBM and MB cells in 2D cultures and in 3D tumor spheroids. A fluorescent derivative was used to show the early cytosolic accumulation of ALK4 in tumor cells. Spontaneous homolysis of ALK4 led to the release of alkyl radicals, which triggered the generation of reactive oxygen species, fragmentation of the mitochondrial network and ultimately apoptosis. To control its homolytic process, the selected alkoxyamine was bioconjugated to a peptide selectively recognized by matrix metalloproteases. This bioconjugate, named ALK4-MMPp, successfully inhibited survival, proliferation, and invasion of GBM and MB tumor micromasses. We further developed innovative brain and cerebellum organotypic models to monitor treatment response over time. It confirmed that ALK4-MMPp significantly impaired tumor progression, while no significant damage was observed on normal brain tissue. Lastly, we showed that ALK4-MMPp was well-tolerated in vivo by zebrafish embryos. This study provides a new strategy to control the activation of alkoxyamines, and revealed the bioconjugate ALK4-MMPp bioconjugate as a good anticancer drug candidate.
RESUMEN
BACKGROUND: Medulloblastoma is the most frequent brain malignancy of childhood. The current multimodal treatment comes at the expense of serious and often long-lasting side effects. Drug repurposing is a strategy to fast-track anti-cancer therapy with low toxicity. Here, we showed the ability of ß-blockers to potentiate radiotherapy in medulloblastoma with bad prognosis. METHODS: Medulloblastoma cell lines, patient-derived xenograft cells, 3D spheroids and an innovative cerebellar organotypic model were used to identify synergistic interactions between ß-blockers and ionising radiations. Gene expression profiles of ß-adrenergic receptors were analysed in medulloblastoma samples from 240 patients. Signaling pathways were explored by RT-qPCR, RNA interference, western blotting and RNA sequencing. Medulloblastoma cell bioenergetics were evaluated by measuring the oxygen consumption rate, the extracellular acidification rate and superoxide production. FINDINGS: Low concentrations of ß-blockers significantly potentiated clinically relevant radiation protocols. Although patient biopsies showed detectable expression of ß-adrenergic receptors, the ability of the repurposed drugs to potentiate ionising radiations did not result from the inhibition of the canonical signaling pathway. We highlighted that the efficacy of the combinatorial treatment relied on a metabolic catastrophe that deprives medulloblastoma cells of their adaptive bioenergetics capacities. This led to an overproduction of superoxide radicals and ultimately to an increase in ionising radiations-mediated DNA damages. INTERPRETATION: These data provide the evidence of the efficacy of ß-blockers as potentiators of radiotherapy in medulloblastoma, which may help improve the treatment and quality of life of children with high-risk brain tumours. FUNDING: This study was funded by institutional grants and charities.
Asunto(s)
Neoplasias Cerebelosas , Meduloblastoma , Niño , Metabolismo Energético , Humanos , Meduloblastoma/tratamiento farmacológico , Meduloblastoma/genética , Meduloblastoma/radioterapia , Calidad de Vida , Receptores Adrenérgicos beta/metabolismo , Receptores Adrenérgicos beta/uso terapéutico , SuperóxidosRESUMEN
Despite recent advances in deciphering cancer drug resistance mechanisms, relapse is a widely observed phenomenon in advanced cancers, mainly due to intratumor clonal heterogeneity. How tumor clones progress and impact each other remains elusive. In this study, we developed 2D and 3D non-small cell lung cancer co-culture systems and defined a phenomenological mathematical model to better understand clone dynamics. Our results demonstrated that the drug-sensitive clones inhibit the proliferation of the drug-resistant ones under untreated conditions. Model predictions and their experimental in vitro and in vivo validations indicated that a metronomic schedule leads to a better regulation of tumor cell heterogeneity over time than a maximum-tolerated dose schedule, while achieving control of tumor progression. We finally showed that drug-sensitive and -resistant clones exhibited different metabolic statuses that could be involved in controlling the intratumor heterogeneity dynamics. Our data suggested that the glycolytic activity of drug-sensitive clones could play a major role in inhibiting the drug-resistant clone proliferation. Altogether, these computational and experimental approaches provide foundations for using metronomic therapy to control drug-sensitive and -resistant clone balance and highlight the potential of targeting cell metabolism to manage intratumor heterogeneity.