Abstract

Methadone is an analgesic drug used for pain treatment and heroin substitution. Recently, methadone has been proposed to be useful also for cancer therapy, including glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most severe form of brain cancer, because experiments on cultured glioma cells treated with doxorubicin showed promising results. Doxorubicin, however, is not used first-line in GBM therapy. Therefore, we analyzed the cytotoxic effect of methadone alone and in combination with temozolomide, a DNA-alkylating drug that is first-line used in GBM treatment, utilizing GBM-derived cell lines and a human fibroblast cell line. We show that methadone is cytotoxic on its own, inducing apoptosis and necrosis, which was observed at a concentration above 20 µg/mL. Methadone was similar toxic in isogenic MGMT expressing and non-expressing cells, and in LN229 glioblastoma and VH10T human fibroblasts. The apoptosis-inducing activity of methadone is not bound on the opioid receptor (OR), since naloxone, a competitive inhibitor of OR, did not attenuate methadone-induced apoptosis/necrosis. Administrating methadone and temozolomide together, temozolomide had no impact on methadone-induced apoptosis (which occurred 3 days after treatment), while temozolomide-induced apoptosis (which occurred 5 days after treatment) was unaffected at low (non-toxic) methadone concentration (5 µg/mL), and at high (toxic) methadone concentration (20 µg/mL) the cytotoxic effects of methadone and temozolomide were additive. Methadone is not genotoxic, as revealed by comet and γH2AX assay, and did not ameliorate the genotoxic effect of temozolomide. Further, methadone did not induce cellular senescence and had no effect on temozolomide-induced senescence. Although methadone was toxic on senescent cells, it cannot be considered a senolytic drug since cytotoxicity was not specific for senescent cells. Finally, we show that methadone had no impact on the MGMT promoter methylation. Overall, the data show that methadone on glioblastoma cells in vitro is cytotoxic and induces apoptosis/necrosis at doses that are above the level that can be achieved in vivo. It is not genotoxic, and does not ameliorate the cell killing or the senescence-inducing effect of temozolomide (no synergistic effect), indicating it has no impact on temozolomide-induced signaling pathways. The data do not support the notion that concomitant methadone treatment supports temozolomide-based chemotherapy.

Highlights

  • Glioblastoma (WHO grade IV, glioblastoma multiforme, GBM) accounting for ~70% of high- grade malignant gliomas, have a dismal prognosis

  • Methadone has been proposed to be useful for cancer therapy, including glioblastoma multiforme (GBM), the most severe form of brain cancer, because experiments on cultured glioma cells treated with doxorubicin showed promising results

  • We analyzed the cytotoxic effect of methadone alone and in combination with temozolomide, a DNA-alkylating drug that is first-line used in GBM treatment, utilizing GBM-derived cell lines and a human fibroblast cell line

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Glioblastoma (WHO grade IV, glioblastoma multiforme, GBM) accounting for ~70% of high- grade malignant gliomas, have a dismal prognosis. The same group studied MTD on glioblastoma cell lines and reported that the opioid is able to enhance the apoptosis-inducing effect of doxorubicin in this cell system [5]. This was explained by assuming that MTD impacts doxorubicin uptake and attenuates its efflux, which would enhance the intracellular level of doxorubicin and, its cytotoxic activity [5]. First-line chemotherapeutics for glioma (grade III and IV) is the DNA alkylating agent temozolomide (TMZ) [3] and, it is desirable to study the interaction of MTD with TMZ This genotoxic anticancer drug is a triazene derivative that does not need metabolic activation and methylates DNA at various sites [7]. We report that MTD does not induce cellular senescence, is not genotoxic, and has no impact on epigenetic MGMT regulation

Viability Assays
Is TMZ-Induced Senescence Affected by MTD?
Is MTD a DNA Damaging Agent and Does It Impact TMZ-Induced DNA Damage?
2.10. MTD and MGMT Promoter Methylation
Cell Lines and Culture Conditions
Western Blotting and MS-PCR
Quantification of Apoptosis and Necrosis
Quantification of Cellular Senescence
Quantification of γH2AX Foci
Comet Assay
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.