Abstract

Introduction: Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most aggressive malignant brain cancer in adults. Induction of the DNA damage response pathway by Temozolomide (TMZ), a DNA alkylating agent, activates p53 resulting in apoptosis. GBM can adapt by upregulatingthe pro-survival pathway regulator Protein Kinase B (AKT), which phosphorylates murine double minute 2 (MDM2) resulting in increased MDM2-mediated p53 ubiquitination. We hypothesize that a combination treatment of blood-brain-barrier penetrant small molecule inhibitors (SMIs) to AKT (GDC-0068) and MDM2 protein-protein interaction inhibitor (RG7388), will stabilize p53 expression and potentiate TMZ-mediated effects in a recurrent p53wt GBM xenoline.
 Methods: Dose response assays followed by Calcusyn statistical analysis determined optimal combination dose ratios. Incucyte imaging analyzedconfluence throughout a treatment cycle. Cellular response was characterized by: 1) Western blotting 2) Flow cytometry with SPiDER β-Gal and FITC Annexin V/ Propidium Iodide to quantify senescent and apoptotic cells, respectively 3) p53 siRNA knockdown to examine p53 dependency in treated cells.
 Results: Combination index identified synergismof TMZ in the presence of AKT and MDM2 inhibitors at clinically achievable concentrations. Incucyte confirmed a low-dose triple combination significantly inhibited tumor growth. Western blots detected low expression of cleaved PARP and elevated expression of p53 and p21 in RG7388-treated cells compared to vehicle, suggesting senescence-related growth inhibition. SPiDER β-Gal and FITC Annexin V/PI assays confirmed a high percentage of senescent cells and minimal apoptosis following combination treatment compared to vehicle or single SMI-treated cells. P53 siRNA knockdown confirmed that cell growth inhibition is p53 dependent in treated cells.
 Conclusion: This study provides rationale for targeting p53 in recurrent p53wt GBM and reveals that senescence could function as a potential therapeutic resistance mechanism. In future studies, targeting of the MDM2-p53 network in the presence of a SM senescence inhibitor will be evaluated to determine if this increases GBM cell death.

Highlights

  • Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most aggressive malignant brain cancer in adults

  • We hypothesize that a combination treatment of blood-brain-barrier penetrant small molecule inhibitors (SMIs) to AKT (GDC-0068) and murine double minute 2 (MDM2) protein-protein interaction inhibitor (RG7388), will stabilize p53 expression and potentiate TMZ-mediated effects in a recurrent p53wt GBM xenoline

  • SPiDER β-Gal and FITC Annexin V/PI assays confirmed a high percentage of senescent cells and minimal apoptosis following combination treatment compared to vehicle or single SMI-treated cells

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Summary

Introduction

Glioblastoma (GBM) is the most aggressive malignant brain cancer in adults. Induction of the DNA damage response pathway by Temozolomide (TMZ), a DNA alkylating agent, activates p53 resulting in apoptosis. GBM can adapt by upregulating the pro-survival pathway regulator Protein Kinase B (AKT), which phosphorylates murine double minute 2 (MDM2) resulting in increased MDM2-mediated p53 ubiquitination. We hypothesize that a combination treatment of blood-brain-barrier penetrant small molecule inhibitors (SMIs) to AKT (GDC-0068) and MDM2 protein-protein interaction inhibitor (RG7388), will stabilize p53 expression and potentiate TMZ-mediated effects in a recurrent p53wt GBM xenoline

Methods
Results
Conclusion
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