Abstract

Tumor resistance seriously hinders the clinical application of chloroethylnitrosoureas (CENUs), such as O6-methylguanine-DNA methylguanine (MGMT), which can repair O6-alkyl lesions, thereby inhibiting the formation of cytotoxic DNA interstrand cross-links (ICLs). Metabolic differences between tumor and normal cells provide a biochemical basis for novel therapeutic strategies aimed at selectively inhibiting tumor energy metabolism. In this study, the energy blocker lonidamine (LND) was selected as a chemo-sensitizer of nimustine (ACNU) to explore its potential effects and underlying mechanisms in human glioblastoma in vitro and in vivo. A series of cell-level studies showed that LND significantly increased the cytotoxic effects of ACNU on glioblastoma cells. Furthermore, LND plus ACNU enhanced the energy deficiency by inhibiting glycolysis and mitochondrial function. Notably, LND almost completely downregulated MGMT expression by inducing intracellular acidification. The number of lethal DNA ICLs produced by ACNU increased after the LND pretreatment. The combination of LND and ACNU aggravated cellular oxidative stress. In resistant SF763 mouse tumor xenografts, LND plus ACNU significantly inhibited tumor growth with fewer side effects than ACNU alone. Finally, we proposed a new "HMAGOMR" chemo-sensitizing mechanism through which LND may act as a potential chemo-sensitizer to reverse ACNU resistance in glioblastoma: moderate inhibition of hexokinase (HK) activity (H); mitochondrial dysfunction (M); suppressing adenosine triphosphate (ATP)-dependent drug efflux (A); changing redox homeostasis to inhibit GSH-mediated drug inactivation (G) and increasing intracellular oxidative stress (O); downregulating MGMT expression through intracellular acidification (M); and partial inhibition of energy-dependent DNA repair (R).

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