| Literature DB >> 33917954 |
Vincenzo Mattei1,2, Francesca Santilli1,2, Stefano Martellucci1,3, Simona Delle Monache3, Jessica Fabrizi1, Alessandro Colapietro3, Adriano Angelucci3, Claudio Festuccia3.
Abstract
Glioblastoma (GBM) is known to be the most common and lethal primary malignant brain tumor. Therapies against this neoplasia have a high percentage of failure, associated with the survival of self-renewing glioblastoma stem cells (GSCs), which repopulate treated tumors. In addition, despite new radical surgery protocols and the introduction of new anticancer drugs, protocols for treatment, and technical advances in radiotherapy, no significant improvement in the survival rate for GBMs has been realized. Thus, novel antitarget therapies could be used in conjunction with standard radiochemotherapy approaches. Targeted therapy, indeed, may address specific targets that play an essential role in the proliferation, survival, and invasiveness of GBM cells, including numerous molecules involved in signal transduction pathways. Significant cellular heterogeneity and the hierarchy with GSCs showing a therapy-resistant phenotype could explain tumor recurrence and local invasiveness and, therefore, may be a target for new therapies. Therefore, the forced differentiation of GSCs may be a promising new approach in GBM treatment. This article provides an updated review of the current standard and experimental therapies for GBM, as well as an overview of the molecular characteristics of GSCs, the mechanisms that activate resistance to current treatments, and a new antitumor strategy for treating GSCs for use as therapy.Entities:
Keywords: cancer stem cells; glioblastoma; glioblastoma stem cells; glioblastoma stem cells and therapy resistance; glioblastoma therapy resistance; new drugs in the treatment of glioblastoma stem cells
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33917954 PMCID: PMC8068366 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22083863
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Potential therapeutic targets against cancer stem cells.
| Cancer Stem Cell Pathway | Potential | Agents | Effects | Target Model | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Notch | Notch | Notch-1 siRNA, Delta-like-1 siRNA, Jagged-1 siRNA, Delta-like-1 Fusion protein | Downregulation of Notch and its ligands leads to a reduction of oncogenic potential of GSCs | GBM cell lines | [ |
| Notch | γ-secretase | Inhibition of Notch by GSIs increases neuronal differentiation and decreases tumorigenicity | DAOY, PFSK, D283Med, and D425Med cell lines. | [ | |
| MRK003 | |||||
| Notch + | MRK003 + | Protective autophagy abrogated by combination with chloroquine | HSR-GBM1 and JHH520 GBM neurosphere lines | [ | |
| Notch + leptin | GSIs + LFDI | High expression of leptin receptors in tumorspheres from GBM | human fetal glial cells SVG p12, human | [ | |
| GBM cell lines | |||||
| U-87 MG, T98G | |||||
| Hypoxic | vasorin | Vasorin acts triggering Notch under hypoxic conditions | GSCs and non-GSCs from GBM | [ | |
| Shh pathway | Shh | cyclopamine | Inhibition of hedgehog pathway by cyclopamine inhibited formation of GBM-derived neurospheres | 40–60% reduction in the growth of adherent glioma lines | [ |
| Wnt pathway | GBM differentiation pathway | Dickkopf-1 (DKK1) Wnt inhibitor suppress PLAGL2 | PLAGL2 acts as an oncogene in human GBM regulating Wnt signaling | primary GBM and established glioma cell lines | [ |
| ASCL1 | - | ASCL1 and Wnt signaling are connected and collaborate with developmental transcription factors (TFs). They support GSCs’ growth | GSC lines derived from different human tumors | [ | |
| RYK | - | RYK promotes stem cell-like and tumorigenic features to glioma cells and are essential to support GSCs | GBM cell line U87MG, AM38, and U251MG cells | [ | |
| Wnt/β catenin | - | Tumor chemoresistance acquisition depends on mesenchymal transformation that is triggered by Wnt/β catenin signaling | GSCs | [ | |
| Tumor microenvironment | Microvasculature and TAMs | Erlotinib and Bevacizumab | Bevacizumab treatment reduces the number of CD133+/Nestin+ tumor initiation cells and decreases microvasculature density and tumor growth | CSCs obtained from tumors | [ |
| M2-TAMs and microvasculature | BLZ945-Inhibitor | TAMs support GBM tumor growth by promoting neovascularization. They play a tumor-supportive role in GBM progression | Proneural GBM | [ | |
| TAMs | shPOSTN | Silencing POSTN that recruits TAMS reduces TAM density, inhibits tumor growth, and increases survival of mice bearing GSC-derived xenografts | Human GBM specimens and glioma-derived cells | [ |
Potential new drugs and treatment against glioblastoma stem cells.
| New Drugs and Treatment against Glioblastoma Stem Cells | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Natural Drugs |
|
|
|
|
| Cannabinoids | Cannabis sativa | Inhibits invasiveness and stem cell-like properties of GBM tumor | [ | |
| Curcumin | Curcuma longa | Targets multiple signaling pathways involved in developing aggressive and drug-resistant features of GBM | [ | |
| Resveratrol | Grape skin, | Inhibited GBM and GSC growth and infiltration, acting partially via AKT deactivation and p53 induction, and suppressed GBM growth in vivo | [ | |
| Crocetin | Saffron | Cotreatment with RTs, similar effect to TMZ | [ | |
| PBI-05204 | Nerium oleander | Induction of tumor cells apoptosis and antitumor effects | [ | |
| Monoclonal Antibodies | Cetuximab | Erbitux | Cotreatment with RTs for locally advanced disease, or in combination with platinum-based chemotherapy in relapsed and/or metastatic disease | [ |
Some clinical trials in the II/III phase designed for GBM treatment.
| Clinical Trials | Treatment | Phase | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| An evaluation of the tolerability and feasibility of combining 5-ALA with BCNU wafers (Gliadel®) in the surgical management of primary GBM | 5-ALA | II | |
| Gliadel® wafers | |||
| Radiotherapy | |||
| Concomitant chemotherapy | |||
| Adjuvant chemotherapy | |||
| Phase II study of bevacizumab and ACNU in patients with recurrent high-grade glioma | Bevacizumab | II | |
| ACNU | |||
| Randomized noncomparative phase II trial with bevacizumab and FOT in the treatment of recurrent GBM | Bevacizumab | II | |
| FOT | |||
| A randomized phase II/III open-label study of ipilimumab and nivolumab versus TMZ in patients with newly diagnosed MGMT unmethylated GBM | Ipilimumab | II/III | |
| Nivolumab | |||
| NovoTTF-100 A device | |||
| Questionnaire administration | |||
| Radiation therapy | |||
| TMZ | |||
| A prospective, multicenter trial of NovoTTF-100 A together with TMZ compared to TMZ alone in patients with newly diagnosed GBM | NovoTTF-100A device | III | |
| TMZ | |||
| Phase III trial exploring the combination of bvacizumab and CCNU in patients with first recurrence of a GBM | Bevacizumab | III | |
| CCNU | |||
| DNA methylation analysis | |||
| Laboratory biomarker analysis | |||
| Phase III double-blind placebo-controlled trial of conventional concurrent chemoradiation and adjuvant TMZ plus bevacizumab versus conventional concurrent chemoradiation and adjuvant TMZ in patients with newly diagnosed GBM | Radiation therapy | III | |
| Bevacizumab | |||
| Laboratory biomarker analysis | |||
| Placebo | |||
| TMZ | |||
| A randomized phase III open-label study of nivolumab versus bevacizumab and multiple phase I safety cohorts of nivolumab or nivolumab in combination with ipilimumab across different lines of GBM | Nivolumab | III | |
| Bevacizumab | |||
| Ipilimumab | |||
| Phase III study of standard radiotherapy plus concomitant and adjuvant OSAG 101 (Theraloc®) plus TMZ versus standard radiotherapy plus concomitant and adjuvant TMZ patient with newly diagnosed, histologically confirmed GBM multiforme grade IV | Nimotuzumab | III |