New small molecules targeting apoptosis and cell viability in osteosarcoma.

PLoS One

Clinical Cooperation Group Osteosarcoma, Institute of Radiation Biology, Helmholtz Zentrum München-National Research Centre for Environmental Health, Neuherberg, Germany; Department of Pediatrics and Children´s Cancer Research Center, Technische Universität München, Munich, Germany; Department of Pediatric Oncology, Klinikum Kassel, Kassel, Germany.

Published: April 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • Osteosarcoma is a type of bone cancer that is usually treated with surgery and chemotherapy, but many patients still have problems because current treatments aren't working well enough.
  • Researchers tested a huge library of 25,000 small molecules to find new treatments that specifically target osteosarcoma cells.
  • They discovered two new small molecules that are better at killing osteosarcoma cells than traditional drugs, showing promise for developing better treatments for this cancer.

Article Abstract

Despite the option of multimodal therapy in the treatment strategies of osteosarcoma (OS), the most common primary malignant bone tumor, the standard therapy has not changed over the last decades and still involves multidrug chemotherapy and radical surgery. Although successfully applied in many patients a large number of patients eventually develop recurrent or metastatic disease in which current therapeutic regimens often lack efficacy. Thus, new therapeutic strategies are urgently needed. In this study, we performed a phenotypic high-throughput screening campaign using a 25,000 small-molecule diversity library to identify new small molecules selectively targeting osteosarcoma cells. We could identify two new small molecules that specifically reduced cell viability in OS cell lines U2OS and HOS, but affected neither hepatocellular carcinoma cell line (HepG2) nor primary human osteoblasts (hOB). In addition, the two compounds induced caspase 3 and 7 activity in the U2OS cell line. Compared to conventional drugs generally used in OS treatment such as doxorubicin, we indeed observed a greater sensitivity of OS cell viability to the newly identified compounds compared to doxorubicin and staurosporine. The p53-negative OS cell line Saos-2 almost completely lacked sensitivity to compound treatment that could indicate a role of p53 in the drug response. Taken together, our data show potential implications for designing more efficient therapies in OS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4454490PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0129058PLOS

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