| Literature DB >> 27538997 |
Vladimir Amani1, Eric W Prince1, Irina Alimova1, Ilango Balakrishnan1, Diane Birks2, Andrew M Donson1, Peter Harris1, Jean M Mulcahy Levy1,3, Michael Handler2,3, Nicholas K Foreman1,2,3, Sujatha Venkataraman1, Rajeev Vibhakar4,5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Diffuse intrinsic pontine gliomas (DIPGs) are highly aggressive, fatal, childhood tumors that arise in the brainstem. DIPGs have no effective treatment, and their location and diffuse nature render them inoperable. Radiation therapy remains the only standard of care for this devastating disease. New therapeutic targets are needed to develop novel therapy for DIPG.Entities:
Keywords: BI6727; DIPG; PLK1
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27538997 PMCID: PMC4991074 DOI: 10.1186/s12885-016-2690-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cancer ISSN: 1471-2407 Impact factor: 4.430
Fig. 1PLK1 is overexpressed in DIPG patient samples and cell lines. a Gene expression of a panel of mitotic checkpoint kinases in patients with DIPG versus normal pons. Arrow shows up-regulation of PLK1 in DIPG samples. b Microarray data analysis of PLK1 gene expression in brainstem, patient DIPG samples, and DIPG cell lines. Expression level ± SEM is shown (c) Gene enrichment analysis of patient DIPG samples compared to normal pons from microarray data for PLK1 associated gene signatures. d Confirmation of elevated PLK1 protein expression in DIPG cell lines compared to normal pons and cerebellum (CB) by western blot. e Western blot analysis of PLK1 protein in normal pons and three patient samples
Fig. 2Small molecule inhibition of PLK1 BI6727 suppresses in vitro DIPG cell proliferation and growth. a DIPG cells were treated for 72 h with increasing dose of the PLK1 small molecule inhibitor BI 6727. Cell proliferation was measured by MTS assay with the mean ± SEM shown. IC50 (in nM) values were calculated as shown. b DIPG cells were treated with increasing doses of BI 6727 for 72 h and total viable cell number was measured (± SEM) using Guava flow cytometry
Fig. 3Inhibition of PLK1 induces G2-M arrest and apoptosis in DIPG tumor cells. a DIPG cells were treated with IC50 doses of BI 6727 for 24 h and analyzed for changes in cell cycle by flow cytometry. b DIPG cells were treated with varying concentrations of BI 6727 for 72 h and analyzed for Annexin V/7-AAD positive late apoptosis markers by flow cytometry. The percent of cells in late apoptosis ± SEM is shown
Fig. 4Small molecule inhibition of PLK1 induces DNA damage in DIPG cells. a DIPGIV cells were treated with IC50 dose of BI 6727 for 6 or 24 h and analyzed for phospho-histone H2AX (γH2AX) by immunofluorescent imaging. Representative images are shown; blue-DAPI nuclei stain and green- γH2AX. b Quantification of the percent of γH2AX positive cells identified in (A) normalized to DAPI. Percent ± SEM is shown. c DIPG4 cells were treated with IC25 and IC75 doses of BI 6727 for 24 h and expression of the DNA damage response proteins p53, p21, RAD51, and phospho-γH2AX were evaluated by western blot analysis
Fig. 5Pre-treatment of DIPG cells with BI 6727 sensitizes them to ionizing radiation. a DIPG cells treated with IC30, IC50 and IC70 doses of BI 6727 for 24 h were then exposed to increasing doses of radiation. Cell proliferation was measured by MTS 5 days after radiation. Mean ± SEM shown b Calculated sensitizer enhancement ratios (SER) with 24-hour pre-treatment of BI 6727 at IC30, IC50 and IC70 doses