| Literature DB >> 28801914 |
Shinichi Esaki1,2, Fares Nigim1, Esther Moon1, Samantha Luk1, Juri Kiyokawa1, William Curry1, Daniel P Cahill1, Andrew S Chi3, A John Iafrate4, Robert L Martuza1, Samuel D Rabkin1, Hiroaki Wakimoto1.
Abstract
Despite the current standard of multimodal management, glioblastoma (GBM) inevitably recurs and effective therapy is not available for recurrent disease. A subset of tumor cells with stem-like properties, termed GBM stem-like cells (GSCs), are considered to play a role in tumor relapse. Although oncolytic herpes simplex virus (oHSV) is a promising therapeutic for GBM, its efficacy against recurrent GBM is incompletely characterized. Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-β) plays vital roles in maintaining GSC stemness and GBM pathogenesis. We hypothesized that oHSV and TGF-β inhibitors would synergistically exert antitumor effects for recurrent GBM. Here we established a panel of patient-derived recurrent tumor models from GBMs that relapsed after postsurgical radiation and chemotherapy, based on GSC-enriched tumor sphere cultures. These GSCs are resistant to the standard-of-care temozolomide but susceptible to oHSVs G47Δ and MG18L. Inhibition of TGF-β receptor kinase with selective targeted small molecules reduced clonogenic sphere formation in all tested recurrent GSCs. The combination of oHSV and TGF-βR inhibitor was synergistic in killing recurrent GSCs through, in part, an inhibitor-induced JNK-MAPK blockade and increase in oHSV replication. In vivo, systemic treatment with TGF-βR inhibitor greatly enhanced the antitumor effects of single intratumoral oHSV injections, resulting in cures in 60% of mice bearing orthotopic recurrent GBM. These results reveal a novel synergistic interaction of oHSV therapy and TGF-β signaling blockade, and warrant further investigations aimed at clinical translation of this combination strategy for GBM patients.Entities:
Keywords: JNK; TGF-β; oncolytic HSV; recurrent glioblastoma
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28801914 PMCID: PMC5765440 DOI: 10.1002/ijc.30929
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Cancer ISSN: 0020-7136 Impact factor: 7.396