The Dopamine Receptor Antagonist TFP Prevents Phenotype Conversion and Improves Survival in Mouse Models of Glioblastoma

Kruttika Bhat, Mohammad Saki, Erina Vlashi, Fei Cheng, Sara Duhachek-Muggy, Claudia Alli, Garrett Yu, Paul Medina, Ling He, Robert Damoiseaux, Matteo Pellegrini, Nathan R. Zemke, Phioanh Leia Nghiemphu, Timothy F. Cloughesy, Linda M. Liau, Harley I. Kornblum, Frank Pajonk

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences(2020)

引用 1|浏览39
暂无评分
摘要
Glioblastoma (GBM) is the deadliest adult brain cancer and all patients ultimately succumb to the disease. Radiation therapy (RT) provides survival benefit of 6 months over surgery alone but these results have not improved in decades. We report that radiation induces a glioma-initiating cell phenotype and we have identified trifluoperazine (TFP) as a compound that interferes with this phenotype conversion. TFP caused loss of radiation-induced Nanog mRNA expression, activation of GSK3 with consecutive post-translational reduction in p-Akt, Sox2 and β-catenin protein levels. TFP did not alter the intrinsic radiation sensitivity of glioma-initiating cells (GICs). Continuous treatment with TFP and a single dose of radiation reduced the number of GICs in vivo and prolonged survival in syngeneic and patient-derived orthotopic xenograft (PDOX) mouse models of GBM. Our findings suggest that combination of a dopamine receptor antagonist with radiation enhances the efficacy of RT in GBM by preventing radiation-induced phenotype conversion of radiosensitive non-GICs into treatment resistant, induced GICs. Significance GBM is the most common and most deadly adult brain cancer. The current standard-of-care is surgery followed by RT and temozolomide, which results in a median survival time of only 15 months. The efficacy of chemotherapies and targeted therapies in GBM is very limited because most of these drugs do not pass the blood-brain-barrier. Ultimately, all patients succumb to the disease. Our study describes radiation-induced cellular plasticity as a novel resistance mechanism in GBM. We identified a dopamine receptor antagonist as a readily available, FDA-approved drug known to penetrate the blood-brain-barrier which prevents phenotype conversion of glioma cells into glioma-initiating cells and prologs survival in mouse models of GBM, thus suggesting that it will improve the efficacy of RT without increasing toxicity.
更多
查看译文
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要