| Literature DB >> 34521765 |
Amélie Vézina1,2, Monica Manglani3, DreeAnna Morris4, Brandon Foster5, Matthew McCord1, Hua Song1, Meili Zhang1, Dionne Davis1, Wei Zhang1, Jessica Bills4, Kunio Nagashima2, Priya Shankarappa6, Jessica Kindrick6, Stuart Walbridge5, Cody J Peer6, William D Figg6, Mark R Gilbert1, Dorian B McGavern3, Leslie L Muldoon4, Sadhana Jackson7,2.
Abstract
The blood-tumor barrier (BTB) limits the entry of effective chemotherapeutic agents into the brain for treatment of malignant tumors like glioblastoma. Poor drug entry across the BTB allows infiltrative glioma stem cells to evade therapy and develop treatment resistance. Regadenoson, an FDA-approved adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) agonist, has been shown to increase drug delivery across the blood-brain barrier in non-tumor-bearing rodents without a defined mechanism of enhancing BTB permeability. Here, we characterize the time-dependent impact of regadenoson on brain endothelial cell interactions and paracellular transport, using mouse and rat brain endothelial cells and tumor models. In vitro, A2AR activation leads to disorganization of cytoskeletal actin filaments by 30 minutes, downregulation of junctional protein expression by 4 hours, and reestablishment of endothelial cell integrity by 8 hours. In rats bearing intracranial gliomas, regadenoson treatment results in increase of intratumoral temozolomide concentrations, yet no increased survival noted with combined temozolomide therapy. These findings demonstrate regadenoson's ability to induce brain endothelial structural changes among glioma to increase BTB permeability. The use of vasoactive mediators, like regadenoson, which transiently influences paracellular transport, should further be explored to evaluate their potential to enhance central nervous system treatment delivery to aggressive brain tumors. IMPLICATIONS: This study provides insight on the use of a vasoactive agent to increase exposure of the BTB to chemotherapy with intention to improve glioma treatment efficacy. ©2021 The Authors; Published by the American Association for Cancer Research.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34521765 PMCID: PMC8642293 DOI: 10.1158/1541-7786.MCR-19-0995
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cancer Res ISSN: 1541-7786 Impact factor: 6.333