| Literature DB >> 32934745 |
Yushi Ochiai1, Koichiro Sumi1, Emiko Sano2, Sodai Yoshimura1, Shun Yamamuro1, Akiyoshi Ogino1, Takuya Ueda2, Yutaka Suzuki2, Tomohiro Nakayama3, Hiroyuki Hara4, Yoichi Katayama1,5, Atsuo Yoshino1.
Abstract
The prognosis of gioblastoma, the standard chemotherapy agent for which is temozolomide (TMZ), remains poor despite recent advances in multimodal treatments. Therefore, it is necessary to identify and develop novel therapeutics for this malignant disease. Ribavirin, an anti-viral agent which is one of the standard agents for treatment of chronic hepatitis C in combination with interferon (IFN), was recently revealed to have an antitumor potential towards various tumor cells, including malignant glioma cells. The aim of the present study was to examine the antitumor effect of ribavirin in combination with TMZ and IFN-β on glioma cells and to evaluate the possibility that such combinations might represent a novel candidate for glioblastoma therapy. The combination of ribavirin with TMZ and IFN-β displayed a significant cell growth inhibitory effect with a ribavirin dose-dependency, including a relatively low concentration of ribavirin, on not only TMZ-sensitive but also TMZ-resistant malignant glioma cells. The antitumor efficacy of such a combination further indicated a synergistic interaction when assessed by the Chou-Talalay method. Furthermore, flow cytometry analysis suggested that apoptosis induction was one of the possible biological processes underlying the synergistic antitumor effect of these triple combination treatments. Therefore, such combinations may be potentially important in the clinical setting for glioblastoma treatment, although further detailed studies, e.g. on the adverse effects, are required. Copyright: © Ochiai et al.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; glioblastoma; interferon; ribavirin; temozolomide
Year: 2020 PMID: 32934745 PMCID: PMC7475644 DOI: 10.3892/ol.2020.12039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncol Lett ISSN: 1792-1074 Impact factor: 2.967
Figure 1.Cell growth inhibitory effect of a combination of ribavirin with or without TMZ and IFN-β in seven malignant glioma derived cell lines. Malignant glioma cells were exposed to medium containing various concentrations of ribavirin without IFN-β and TMZ (white circles) or with 10 IU/ml IFN-β and 10 µM TMZ (black circle) for 72 h. The combination of ribavirin with TMZ and IFN-β exerted a more profound cell growth inhibitory effect compared with ribavirin alone, with a ribavirin dose-dependency in all malignant glioma cell lines. Data are presented as the mean ± standard error. Significant differences between ribavirin alone and the triple combination were observed at each ribavirin concentration. *P<0.05. IFN-β, interferon-β; TMZ, temozolomide.
Figure 2.Cell growth inhibitory effect of a combination of TMZ alone, TMZ and IFN-β, or TMZ, IFN-β and ribavirin in seven malignant glioma cell lines. A significant synergistic cell growth inhibitory effect was observed with the combination of TMZ, IFN-β and ribavirin in all seven glioblastoma cell lines. The results are presented as the mean ± SE. The Tukey-Kramer test was employed to identify which group differences accounted for the significant P-values *P<0.05. IFN-β, interferon-β; TMZ, temozolomide.
Figure 3.Induction of apoptosis by TMZ, IFN-β, ribavirin, TMZ and IFN-β, or TMZ, IFN-β and ribavirin in U251MG cells. The ratio of detection of Annexin V-positive and Annexin V/PI-positive cells, indicating early-stage apoptosis, and late-phase apoptosis or necrosis, respectively, was measured by fluorescence-activated cell sorting after 72 h of treatment. The percentage of Annexin V-positive cells and the percentage of Annexin V/PI-positive cells was increased as shown at the bottom right and top right, respectively. The mean distributions of apoptotic cells with each drug and the combination are illustrated on the right. IFN-β, interferon-β; TMZ, temozolomide.