scholarly journals The primary culture of malignant glioma cells as a model for the study of anti-tumor activity of substances

2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 196-203
Author(s):  
I. M. Shuba ◽  
V. V. Lylo ◽  
I. S. Karpova ◽  
O. Y. Glavatskyi ◽  
O. I. Kornelyuk

Aim. The aim of our work was to optimize the scheme of obtaining primary cell culture of malignant gliomas, which can be a model for a personalized approach in the selection of chemotherapeutic exposure tactics. Methods. The standard glioma cell line U-251MG and cells obtained as a result of mechanical disaggregation of Gr III–IV tumor fragments to single isolated cells were used. Results. A comparative analysis of the results of cultivation of the standard glioma cell line U-251MG and the primary cell culture of malignant gliomas. An optimized scheme for obtaining primary cultures of human malignant glioma cells isolated from glial tumor fragments obtained during surgery is proposed. Conclusions. Today, more and more preferred methods of individual determination of chemosensitivity over the appointment of standard chemotherapy regimens and it is the primary culture of tumor cells, from our point of view, can be used to test the response to the effect of chemotherapy.Keywords: malignant glioma cells, primary culture, standard cell line.

1998 ◽  
Vol 89 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-132 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frederick F. Lang ◽  
W. K. Alfred Yung ◽  
Uma Raju ◽  
Floralyn Libunao ◽  
Nicholas H. A. Terry ◽  
...  

Object. The authors sought to determine whether combining p53 gene transfer with radiation therapy would enhance the therapeutic killing of p53 wild-type glioma cells. It has been shown in several reports that adenovirus-mediated delivery of the p53 gene into p53 mutant gliomas results in dramatic apoptosis, but has little effect on gliomas containing wild-type p53 alleles. Therefore, p53 gene therapy alone may not be a clinically effective treatment for gliomas because most gliomas are composed of both p53 mutant and wild-type cell populations. One potential approach to overcome this problem is to exploit the role p53 plays as an important determinant in the cellular response to ionizing radiation. Methods. In vitro experiments were performed using the glioma cell line U87MG, which contains wild-type p53. Comparisons were made to the glioma cell line U251MG, which contains a mutant p53 allele. Monolayer cultures were infected with an adenovirus containing wild-type p53 (Ad5CMV-p53), a control vector (dl312), or Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM). Two days later, cultures were irradiated and colony-forming efficiency was determined. Transfection with p53 had only a minor effect on the plating efficiency of nonirradiated U87MG cells, reducing the plating efficiency from 0.23 ± 0.01 in DMEM to 0.22 ± 0.04 after addition of Ad5CMV-p53. However, p53 transfection significantly enhanced the radiosensitivity of these cells. The dose enhancement factor at a surviving fraction of 0.10 was 1.5, and the surviving fraction at 2 Gy was reduced from 0.61 in untransfected controls to 0.38 in p53-transfected cells. Transfection of the viral vector control (dl312) had no effect on U87MG radiosensitivity. In comparison, transfection of Ad5CMV-p53 into the p53 mutant cell line U251MG resulted in a significant decrease in the surviving fraction of these cells compared with controls, and no radiosensitization was detected. To determine whether Ad5CMV-p53—mediated radiosensitization of U87MG cells involved an increase in the propensity of these cells to undergo apoptosis, flow cytometric analysis of terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase-mediated biotinylated-deoxyuridinetriphosphate nick-end labeling—stained cells was performed. Whereas the amount of radiation-induced apoptosis in uninfected and dl312-infected control cells was relatively small (2.1 ± 0.05% and 3.7 ± 0.5%, respectively), the combination of Ad5CMV-p53 infection and radiation treatment significantly increased the apoptotic frequency (18.6 ± 1.4%). To determine whether infection with Ad5CMV-p53 resulted in increased expression of functional exogenous p53 protein, Western blot analysis of p53 was performed on U87MG cells that were exposed to 9 Gy of radiation 2 days after exposure to Ad5CMV-p53, dl312, or DMEM. Infection with Ad5CMV-p53 alone increased p53 levels compared with DMEM- or dl312-treated cells. Irradiation of Ad5CMV-p53—infected cells resulted in a further increase in p53 that reached a maximum at 2 hours postirradiation. To determine whether exogenous p53 provided by Ad5CMV-p53 had transactivating activity, U87MG cells were treated as described earlier and p21 messenger RNA levels were determined. Infection of U87MG cells with Ad5CMV-p53 only resulted in an increase in p21 compared with DMEM- and dl312-treated cells. Irradiation of Ad5CMV-p53—infected cells resulted in an additional time-dependent increase in p21 expression. Conclusions. These data indicate that adenovirus-mediated delivery of p53 may enhance the radioresponse of brain tumor cells containing wild-type p53 and that this radiosensitization may involve converting from a clonogenic to the more sensitive apoptotic form of cell death. Although the mechanism underlying this enhanced apoptotic susceptibility is unknown, the Ad5CMV-p53—infected cells have a higher level of p53 protein, which increases further after irradiation, and this exogenous p53 is transcriptionally active. Thus, it is possible that the combination of Ad5CMV-p53 infection and radiation treatment increases p53 protein to a level that is sufficient to overcome at least partially the block in apoptosis existing in U87MG cells.


BMC Cancer ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael T. C. Poon ◽  
Morgan Bruce ◽  
Joanne E. Simpson ◽  
Cathal J. Hannan ◽  
Paul M. Brennan

Abstract Background Malignant glioma cell line models are integral to pre-clinical testing of novel potential therapies. Accurate prediction of likely efficacy in the clinic requires that these models are reliable and consistent. We assessed this by examining the reporting of experimental conditions and sensitivity to temozolomide in glioma cells lines. Methods We searched Medline and Embase (Jan 1994-Jan 2021) for studies evaluating the effect of temozolomide monotherapy on cell viability of at least one malignant glioma cell line. Key data items included type of cell lines, temozolomide exposure duration in hours (hr), and cell viability measure (IC50). Results We included 212 studies from 2789 non-duplicate records that reported 248 distinct cell lines. The commonest cell line was U87 (60.4%). Only 10.4% studies used a patient-derived cell line. The proportion of studies not reporting each experimental condition ranged from 8.0–27.4%, including base medium (8.0%), serum supplementation (9.9%) and number of replicates (27.4%). In studies reporting IC50, the median value for U87 at 24 h, 48 h and 72 h was 123.9 μM (IQR 75.3–277.7 μM), 223.1 μM (IQR 92.0–590.1 μM) and 230.0 μM (IQR 34.1–650.0 μM), respectively. The median IC50 at 72 h for patient-derived cell lines was 220 μM (IQR 81.1–800.0 μM). Conclusion Temozolomide sensitivity reported in comparable studies was not consistent between or within malignant glioma cell lines. Drug discovery science performed on these models cannot reliably inform clinical translation. A consensus model of reporting can maximise reproducibility and consistency among in vitro studies.


1983 ◽  
Vol 59 (2) ◽  
pp. 208-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Stephen Mahaley ◽  
G. Yancey Gillespie ◽  
Ritchie P. Gillespie ◽  
Pamela J. Watkins ◽  
Darell D. Bigner ◽  
...  

✓ Serial serological studies were carried out on 19 of 20 patients with malignant gliomas who were actively immunized with one of two human glioma tissue culture cell lines (D-54MG or U-251MG). Most patients mounted a significant serum reaction to histocompatibility antigens (HLA's), as well as an antibody response to fetal bovine serum (FBS) which was added to the glioma-cell inoculum. These two sources of antibody accounted for greater than 90% of the antibody induced by these inoculations. Two patients continued to have significant amounts of binding antibody to the original immunizing cell line following exhaustive absorptions of FBS and HLA antibodies. One of these two had all remaining significant antibody removed by further absorption of the serum against the 2-T osteogenic sarcoma tissue culture cell line known to possess antigens cross-reactive with human gliomas. One single patient continued to show significant antibody binding to the original glioma cell line following absorption against FBS, human platelets, and the 2-T cell line, and therefore seems to have produced glioma-distinctive antibodies in response to immunization. The antibody preparation from this patient was also cytotoxic against the original glioma cell line, as well as another recently cultured human glioblastoma cell line. The significance of these serological studies is discussed as it relates to immunological responses patients with gliomas may make to active immunization.


1998 ◽  
Vol 88 (3) ◽  
pp. 529-534 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiro Isoe ◽  
Hirofumi Naganuma ◽  
Shin Nakano ◽  
Atsushi Sasaki ◽  
Eiji Satoh ◽  
...  

Object. The aim of this study was to investigate the mechanism by which malignant glioma cells escape from growth inhibition mediated by transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β), a ubiquitous cytokine that inhibits cell proliferation by causing growth arrest in the G1 phase of the cell cycle. Methods. The authors measured the response of eight malignant glioma cell lines to the growth-inhibiting activity of TGF-β in vitro and the expression of TGF-β Types I and II receptors in malignant glioma cells. The effect of TGF-β on the expression of a p27Kip1 cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitor was also investigated to assess the downstream signal transmission from TGF-β receptors. All malignant glioma cell lines were insensitive to growth inhibition by TGF-β1 and TGF-β2. Analyses of TGF-β receptors by means of affinity labeling in which 125I-TGF-β1 was used showed that six glioma lines had both TGF-β Types I and II receptors on their cell surfaces, whereas two lines had very small amounts of TGF-β Type I and/or Type II receptors. Northern blot analysis showed that all tumor lines expressed variable levels of messenger RNAs for both TGF-β Types I and II receptors. Flow cytometric analyses revealed that treatment of malignant glioma cells with TGF-β1 significantly downregulated the expression of p27Kip1 protein in all malignant glioma cell lines except one. Conclusions. The authors suggest that most malignant glioma cells express TGF-β Types I and II receptors, which can transmit some signals downstream and that the loss of response to TGF-β growth inhibition may not be caused by an abnormality of the TGF-β receptors.


1988 ◽  
Vol 6 (2) ◽  
pp. 179-184 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allan J. Yates ◽  
John F. Collins ◽  
Patrick J. Elder ◽  
Ralph E. Stephens

2007 ◽  
Vol 107 (3) ◽  
pp. 617-627 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ilya V. Ulasov ◽  
Angel A. Rivera ◽  
Yu Han ◽  
David T. Curiel ◽  
Zeng B. Zhu ◽  
...  

Object Gene therapy protocols for malignant gliomas utilize adenoviral vectors that rely almost exclusively on the adenovirus serotype 5 (Ad5) backbone. The authors have previously shown that chimeric vectors that bind to the Ad3 receptor, or CD46, increase the transduction efficiency of malignant brain tumors. In light of the debate regarding the efficacy of CD46 compared with CD80/CD86 in binding Ad3 virions, the authors now examine the expression and transduction efficiency of Ad5/3 chimeras that bind via CD80/CD86. Methods The authors first analyzed CD80/CD86 expression in glioma cell lines. They then used three replication-defective vectors containing a luciferase reporter gene: Ad5/3 (containing the tail and shaft domain of Ad5 and the knob domain of Ad3); Ad3/5 (containing the tail of Ad5, shaft of Ad3, and knob of Ad5); and Ad3/3 (containing the tail of Ad5, shaft of Ad3, and knob of Ad3). These vectors were analyzed both in vitro and in vivo against malignant glioma cells. To examine further the effect of Ad5/3 fiber modification, the authors created an oncolytic vector, conditionally replicative Ad5/3 (CRAd5/3). Results The Ad5/3 vector showed a 10- to 100-fold enhanced transduction efficiency of malignant glioma compared with replication-defective wild-type adenovirus (reAd5) (p < 0.05). Moreover the use of Ad5/3 reduced transgene expression by more than 90% in normal human brain cells compared with reAd5. Finally, the use of CRAd5/3 inhibited tumor cell proliferation by 43% more than replication-competent wild-type virus in vitro (p < 0.05). Conclusions The results of this study demonstrate that the Ad5/3 vector offers superior transduction efficiency and low toxicity in the setting of brain tumors, and therefore represents a potential new approach to gene therapy for malignant gliomas.


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