[HTML][HTML] Pharmacological inhibition of membrane signaling mechanisms reduces the invasiveness of U87-MG and U251-MG glioblastoma cells in vitro

A Varricchio, S Khan, ZK Price, RA Davis, SA Ramesh… - Cancers, 2023 - mdpi.com
Cancers, 2023mdpi.com
Simple Summary Glioblastoma is a brain tumor that is among the deadliest of human
cancers. The invasive spreading of the tumor cells allows subpopulations to escape chemo
and radiation treatments and infiltrate other areas of the brain where they continue to grow
and cause relapses. To achieve their high motility, glioblastoma cells appear to harness
membrane signaling proteins including aquaporin water channels, glutamate receptors, and
ion channels. Work here tested selected combinations of agents that selectively targeted …
Simple Summary
Glioblastoma is a brain tumor that is among the deadliest of human cancers. The invasive spreading of the tumor cells allows subpopulations to escape chemo and radiation treatments and infiltrate other areas of the brain where they continue to grow and cause relapses. To achieve their high motility, glioblastoma cells appear to harness membrane signaling proteins including aquaporin water channels, glutamate receptors, and ion channels. Work here tested selected combinations of agents that selectively targeted sets of signaling proteins known to be enriched in glioblastomas and showed that blocking both glutamate receptor and aquaporin-1 channels is an attractive means for limiting tumor cell motility without causing cell toxicity that might negatively impact normal brain cell function. Using combinations of agents at threshold doses could enable focusing of the pharmacological effects on cancer cells specifically, minimizing off-target effects.
Abstract
Impairing the motility of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) cells is a compelling goal for new approaches to manage this highly invasive and rapidly lethal human brain cancer. Work here characterized an array of pharmacological inhibitors of membrane ion and water channels, alone and in combination, as tools for restraining glioblastoma spread in human GBM cell lines U87-MG and U251-MG. Aquaporins, AMPA glutamate receptors, and ion channel classes (shown to be upregulated in human GBM at the transcript level and linked to mechanisms of motility in other cell types) were selected as pharmacological targets for analyses. Effective compounds reduced the transwell invasiveness of U87-MG and U251-MG glioblastoma cells by 20–80% as compared with controls, without cytotoxicity. The compounds and doses used were: AqB013 (14 μM); nifedipine (25 µM); amiloride (10 µM); apamin (10 µM); 4-aminopyridine (250 µM); and CNQX (6-cyano-7-nitroquinoxaline-2,3-dione; 30 µM). Invasiveness was quantified in vitro across transwell filter chambers layered with extracellular matrix. Co-application of each of the ion channel agents with the water channel inhibitor AqB013 augmented the inhibition of invasion (20 to 50% greater than either agent alone). The motility impairment achieved by co-application of pharmacological agents differed between the GBM proneural-like subtype U87-MG and classical-like subtype U251-MG, showing patterns consistent with relative levels of target channel expression (Human Protein Atlas database). In addition, two compounds, xanthurenic acid and caelestine C (from the Davis Open Access Natural Product-based Library, Griffith University QLD), were discovered to block invasion at micromolar doses in both GBM lines (IC50 values from 0.03 to 1 µM), without cytotoxicity, as measured by full mitochondrial activity under conditions matching those in transwell assays and by normal growth in spheroid assays. Mechanisms of action of these agents based on published work are likely to involve modulation of glutamatergic receptor signaling. Treating glioblastoma by the concurrent inhibition of multiple channel targets could be a powerful approach for slowing invasive cell spread without cytotoxic side effects, potentially enhancing the effectiveness of clinical interventions focused on eradicating primary tumors.
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