Abstract
The poor outcome of pancreas ductal adenocarcinomas (PDAC) is frequently linked to therapy resistance. Modulated electro-hyperthermia (mEHT) generated by 13.56 MHz capacitive radiofrequency can induce direct tumor damage and promote chemo- and radiotherapy. Here, we tested the effect of mEHT either alone or in combination with radiotherapy using an in vivo model of Panc1, a KRAS and TP53 mutant, radioresistant PDAC cell line. A single mEHT shot of 60 min induced ~50% loss of viable cells and morphological signs of apoptosis including chromatin condensation, nuclear shrinkage and apoptotic bodies. Most mEHT treatment related effects exceeded those of radiotherapy, and these were further amplified after combining the two modalities. Treatment related apoptosis was confirmed by a significantly elevated number of annexin V single-positive and cleaved/activated caspase-3 positive tumor cells, as well as sub-G1-phase tumor cell fractions. mEHT and mEHT+radioterapy caused the moderate accumulation of γH2AX positive nuclear foci, indicating DNA double-strand breaks and upregulation of the cyclin dependent kinase inhibitor p21waf1 besides the downregulation of Akt signaling. A clonogenic assay revealed that both mono- and combined treatments affected the tumor progenitor/stem cell populations too. In conclusion, mEHT treatment can contribute to tumor growth inhibition and apoptosis induction and resolve radioresistance of Panc1 PDAC cells.
Highlights
The main cause of mortality and morbidity of pancreatic cancer is due to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC)
Hyperthermia has been suggested to improve the efficiency of both radio- [5] and chemotherapy but its mechanism in PDAC treatment requires further clarification, which we tested in this study using modulated electro-hyperthermia treatment
Our results show that modulated electro-hyperthermia (mEHT) can induce direct tumor damage and contribute to the effective radiotherapy of the resistant Panc1 pancreatic adenocarcinoma through DNA double-strand beaks and caspase dependent apoptosis
Summary
The main cause of mortality and morbidity of pancreatic cancer is due to pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma (PDAC). PDAC, which represents ~85% of the pancreatic cancers [1], has been associated with very poor prognosis of an estimated
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