The therapeutic efficacy of standard cancer treatments such as chemotherapy may be improved if they are combined with gene-therapy. Less than 30% of patients with glioblastoma multiforme respond to adjuvant chemotherapy. Actively dividing cells are generally more sensitive to chemotherapy than are non-dividing cells. To determine whether forced cell-cycle progression selectively sensitizes tumor cells to alkylating agents, we examined the effects of overexpressing the E2F-1 protein (a positive regulator of cell-cycle progression) on the sensitivity of two malignant human glioma cell lines, U-251 MG and D-54 MG, to BCNU and temozolomide. Treating these cells with 20-35 microM BCNU or 20-30 microM temozolomide resulted in 50% growth inhibition (IC50) within 4 or 6 days, respectively. By contrast, cells that were first induced to overexpress E2F-1 protein by infection with an adenoviral vector had IC50s that were 37-50% lower. Conversely, transferring the cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors p16 and p21 to the cells, also by adenoviral infection, produced 3 to 4-fold increases in chemoresistance. Cell-cycle analyses showed that the combination of E2F-1 overexpression and treatment with BCNU or temozolomide increased the proportion of cells in S phase, but the combination of p16 or p21 overexpression and drug treatment reduced the proportion of cells in S phase. These observations suggest that overexpression of genes that positively control cell-cycle progression may be useful for increasing the sensitivity of glioma cells to alkylating agents.
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