Arsenic Trioxide exerts cytotoxic and radiosensitizing effects in pediatric Medulloblastoma cell lines of SHH Subgroup

Paulo Klinger(Universidade de São Paulo), Lara Elis Alberici Delsin(Universidade de São Paulo), Gustavo Alencastro Veiga Cruzeiro(Universidade de São Paulo), Augusto Faria Andrade(Universidade de São Paulo), Régia Caroline Peixoto Lira(Universidade de São Paulo), Pamela Viani de Andrade(Universidade de São Paulo), Pablo Shimaoka Chagas(Universidade de São Paulo), Rosane Gomes de Paula Queiróz(Universidade de São Paulo), Felipe Amstalden Trevisan(Universidade de São Paulo), Ricardo Santos de Oliveira(Universidade de Ribeirão Preto), Carlos Alberto Scrideli(Universidade de São Paulo), Luíz Gonzaga Tone(Universidade de São Paulo), Elvis Terci Valera(Universidade de São Paulo)
Scientific Reports
April 22, 2020
Cited by 14Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

We evaluated the potential effects of ATO in different pediatric SHH-MB cell lines (ONS-76: TP53-wild type; DAOY and UW402: TP53-mutated). MB cell lines molecular subgroup was confirmed and TP53 mutations were validated. Cell viability, clonogenicity and apoptosis were evaluated after ATO treatment at different concentrations (1-16 µM) alone or combined with irradiation doses (0.5, 1, 2 and 4 Gy). Rad51 and Ku86 proteins were evaluated by WB. ATO treatment reduced cell viability for all SHH-MB cell lines. Significant decrease of clonogenic capacity and higher apoptosis rates were also observed after ATO exposure, being cell death more pronounced (>70%) for the SHH-MB TP53-mutated. Combined treatment of ATO with irradiation also reduced colonies formation in UW402 tumor cells, which was independent of DNA damage repair proteins Rad51 and Ku86. In silico analyses suggested that a set of genes from cell cycle and p53 pathways are differentially expressed in SHH tumor subtypes, suggesting that cell lines may respond to therapies according to the gene expression profiles. Herein, we showed ATO cytotoxicity in pediatric SHH cell lines, with marked radiosensitizing effect for the MB-SHH TP53-mutated cells. These results highlight the potential of ATO, alone or in combination with radiotherapy, supporting further clinical investigations.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis