Improving Localized Radiotherapy for Glioblastoma via Small Molecule Inhibition of KIF11.
Miranda M TallmanAbigail A ZalenskiIan StablMorgan S SchrockLuke KollinEliane de JongKuntal DeTreg M GrubbMatthew K SummersMonica VenerePublished in: Cancers (2023)
Glioblastoma, IDH-wild type (GBM) is the most common and lethal malignant primary brain tumor. Standard of care includes surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy with the DNA alkylating agent temozolomide (TMZ). Despite these intensive efforts, current GBM therapy remains mainly palliative with only modest improvement achieved in overall survival. With regards to radiotherapy, GBM is ranked as one of the most radioresistant tumor types. In this study, we wanted to investigate if enriching cells in the most radiosensitive cell cycle phase, mitosis, could improve localized radiotherapy for GBM. To achieve cell cycle arrest in mitosis we used ispinesib, a small molecule inhibitor to the mitotic kinesin, KIF11. Cell culture studies validated that ispinesib radiosensitized patient-derived GBM cells. In vivo, we validated that ispinesib increased the fraction of tumor cells arrested in mitosis as well as increased apoptosis. Critical for the translation of this approach, we validated that combination therapy with ispinesib and irradiation led to the greatest increase in survival over either monotherapy alone. Our data highlight KIF11 inhibition in combination with radiotherapy as a new combinatorial approach that reduces the overall radioresistance of GBM and which can readily be moved into clinical trials.
Keyphrases
- cell cycle arrest
- locally advanced
- small molecule
- cell death
- cell cycle
- early stage
- combination therapy
- pi k akt
- radiation induced
- radiation therapy
- clinical trial
- wild type
- induced apoptosis
- rectal cancer
- squamous cell carcinoma
- palliative care
- cell proliferation
- oxidative stress
- signaling pathway
- quality improvement
- randomized controlled trial
- dna damage
- stem cells
- mesenchymal stem cells
- bone marrow
- cell free
- circulating tumor
- acute coronary syndrome
- cell therapy
- health insurance
- free survival
- pain management
- study protocol
- coronary artery bypass
- phase iii