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Pharmacological Strategy for Selective Targeting of Glioblastoma by Redox-active Combination Drug - Comparison With the Chemotherapeutic Standard-of-care Temozolomide. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study introduces a new drug combo, menadione/ascorbate (M/A), aimed at selectively targeting glioblastoma, comparing its effectiveness to the standard chemotherapy, temozolomide (TMZ).
  • - Experiments on glioblastoma mice showed that M/A treatment slowed tumor growth and improved survival rates without the side effects common with TMZ, though M/A's tumor shrinkage was not as significant.
  • - M/A was found to selectively harm glioblastoma cells by increasing mitochondrial superoxide production while leaving normal cells unharmed, suggesting a potential use alongside surgery and traditional treatments for better patient outcomes.

Article Abstract

Background/aim: We describe a pharmacological strategy for selectively targeting glioblastoma using a redox-active combination drug menadione/ascorbate (M/A), compared to the chemotherapeutic standard-of-care temozolomide (TMZ).

Materials And Methods: Experiments were conducted on glioblastoma mice (GS9L cell transplants - intracranial model), treated with M/A or TMZ. Tumor growth was monitored by magnetic resonance imaging. Effects of M/A and TMZ on cell viability and overproduction of mitochondrial superoxide were also evaluated on isolated glioblastoma cells (GS9L) and normal microglial cells (EOC2).

Results: M/A treatment suppressed tumor growth and increased survival without adverse drug-related side effects that were characteristic of TMZ. Survival was comparable with that of TMZ at the doses we have tested so far, although the effect of M/A on tumor growth was less pronounced than that of TMZ. M/A induced highly specific cytotoxicity accompanied by dose-dependent overproduction of mitochondrial superoxide in glioblastoma cells, but not in normal microglial cells.

Conclusion: M/A differentiates glioblastoma cells from normal microglial cells, causing redox alterations and oxidative stress only in the tumor. This easier-to-tolerate treatment has a potential to support the surgery and conventional therapy of glioblastoma.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.21873/anticanres.15426DOI Listing

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