Enhanced Survival of High-Risk Medulloblastoma-Bearing Mice after Multimodal Treatment with Radiotherapy, Decitabine, and Abacavir.
Marieke GringmuthJenny WaltherSebastian GreiserMagali ToussaintBenjamin SchwalmMarcel KoolRolf-Dieter KortmannAnnegret GlasowIna PattiesPublished in: International journal of molecular sciences (2022)
Children with high-risk SHH/ TP53 -mut and Group 3 medulloblastoma (MB) have a 5-year overall survival of only 40%. Innovative approaches to enhance survival while preventing adverse effects are urgently needed. We investigated an innovative therapy approach combining irradiation (RT), decitabine (DEC), and abacavir (ABC) in a patient-derived orthotopic SHH/ TP53 -mut and Group 3 MB mouse model. MB-bearing mice were treated with DEC, ABC and RT. Mouse survival, tumor growth (BLI, MRT) tumor histology (H/E), proliferation (Ki-67), and endothelial (CD31) staining were analyzed. Gene expression was examined by microarray and RT-PCR (Ki-67, VEGF, CD31, CD15, CD133, nestin, CD68, IBA). The RT/DEC/ABC therapy inhibited tumor growth and enhanced mouse survival. Ki-67 decreased in SHH/ TP53 -mut MBs after RT, DEC, RT/ABC, and RT/DEC/ABC therapy. CD31 was higher in SHH/ TP53 -mut compared to Group 3 MBs and decreased after RT/DEC/ABC. Microarray analyses showed a therapy-induced downregulation of cell cycle genes. By RT-PCR, no therapy-induced effect on stem cell fraction or immune cell invasion/activation could be shown. We showed for the first time that RT/DEC/ABC therapy improves survival of orthotopic SHH/ TP53 -mut and Group 3 MB-bearing mice without inducing adverse effects suggesting the potential for an adjuvant application of this multimodal therapy approach in the human clinic.
Keyphrases
- gene expression
- cell cycle
- stem cells
- endothelial cells
- early stage
- high glucose
- cell proliferation
- acute myeloid leukemia
- type diabetes
- dna methylation
- signaling pathway
- squamous cell carcinoma
- skeletal muscle
- bone marrow
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- radiation induced
- transcription factor
- genome wide
- climate change
- risk assessment
- locally advanced
- stress induced
- single molecule