PURPOSE: Malignant gliomas are the most aggressive human brain tumors without any curative treatment. The antitumor effect of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) in gliomas has thus far only been thoroughly established in tumor cell lines. In the present study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of TRAIL in primary human glioma cells. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We isolated primary tumor cells from 13 astrocytoma and oligoastrocytoma patients of all four WHO grades of malignancy and compared the levels of TRAIL-induced apoptosis induction, long-term tumor cell survival, caspase, and caspase target cleavage. RESULTS: We established a stable culture model for isolated primary human glioma cells. In contrast to cell lines, isolated primary tumor cells from all investigated glioma patients were highly TRAIL resistant. Regardless of the tumor heterogeneity, cotreatment with the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib efficiently sensitized all primary glioma samples for TRAIL-induced apoptosis and tremendously reduced their clonogenic survival. Due to the pleiotropic effect of bortezomib-enhanced TRAIL DISC formation upon TRAIL triggering, down-regulation of cFLIP(L) and activation of the intrinsic apoptosis pathway seem to cooperatively contribute to the antitumor effect of bortezomib/TRAIL cotreatment. CONCLUSION: TRAIL sensitivity of tumor cell lines is not a reliable predictor for the behavior of primary tumor cells. The widespread TRAIL resistance in primary glioma cells described here questions the therapeutic clinical benefit of TRAIL as a monotherapeutic agent. Overcoming TRAIL resistance by bortezomib cotreatment might, however, provide a powerful therapeutic option for glioma patients.
PURPOSE:Malignant gliomas are the most aggressive humanbrain tumors without any curative treatment. The antitumor effect of tumor necrosis factor-related apoptosis-inducing ligand (TRAIL) in gliomas has thus far only been thoroughly established in tumor cell lines. In the present study, we investigated the therapeutic potential of TRAIL in primary humanglioma cells. EXPERIMENTAL DESIGN: We isolated primary tumor cells from 13 astrocytoma and oligoastrocytomapatients of all four WHO grades of malignancy and compared the levels of TRAIL-induced apoptosis induction, long-term tumor cell survival, caspase, and caspase target cleavage. RESULTS: We established a stable culture model for isolated primary humanglioma cells. In contrast to cell lines, isolated primary tumor cells from all investigated gliomapatients were highly TRAIL resistant. Regardless of the tumor heterogeneity, cotreatment with the proteasome inhibitor bortezomib efficiently sensitized all primary glioma samples for TRAIL-induced apoptosis and tremendously reduced their clonogenic survival. Due to the pleiotropic effect of bortezomib-enhanced TRAIL DISC formation upon TRAIL triggering, down-regulation of cFLIP(L) and activation of the intrinsic apoptosis pathway seem to cooperatively contribute to the antitumor effect of bortezomib/TRAIL cotreatment. CONCLUSION:TRAIL sensitivity of tumor cell lines is not a reliable predictor for the behavior of primary tumor cells. The widespread TRAIL resistance in primary glioma cells described here questions the therapeutic clinical benefit of TRAIL as a monotherapeutic agent. Overcoming TRAIL resistance by bortezomib cotreatment might, however, provide a powerful therapeutic option for gliomapatients.
Authors: Johannes Lemke; Andreas Noack; Dieter Adam; Vladimir Tchikov; Uwe Bertsch; Christian Röder; Stefan Schütze; Harald Wajant; Holger Kalthoff; Anna Trauzold Journal: J Mol Med (Berl) Date: 2010-03-31 Impact factor: 4.599
Authors: Christina Menke; Lianghua Bin; Jacqueline Thorburn; Kian Behbakht; Heide L Ford; Andrew Thorburn Journal: Cancer Res Date: 2011-03-01 Impact factor: 12.701
Authors: Surasak Phuphanich; Jeffrey G Supko; Kathryn A Carson; Stuart A Grossman; L Burt Nabors; Tom Mikkelsen; Glenn Lesser; Steve Rosenfeld; Serena Desideri; Jeffrey J Olson Journal: J Neurooncol Date: 2010-03-08 Impact factor: 4.130
Authors: D Lecis; C Drago; L Manzoni; P Seneci; C Scolastico; E Mastrangelo; M Bolognesi; A Anichini; H Kashkar; H Walczak; D Delia Journal: Br J Cancer Date: 2010-05-11 Impact factor: 7.640
Authors: Ronald Koschny; Heidrun Holland; Jaromir Sykora; Hande Erdal; Wolfgang Krupp; Manfred Bauer; Ulrike Bockmuehl; Peter Ahnert; Jürgen Meixensberger; Wolfgang Stremmel; Henning Walczak; Tom M Ganten Journal: J Neurooncol Date: 2009-09-20 Impact factor: 4.130