4.7 Article

SRC Tyrosine Kinase Inhibitor and X-rays Combined Effect on Glioblastoma Cell Lines

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms21113917

Keywords

Glioblastoma; ionizing radiation; hypoxia; DNA damage; combined treatments

Funding

  1. Institut National du Cancer [INCA 11699]
  2. HABIONOR European project
  3. Normandy County Council
  4. French State in the framework of the interregional development Contract Vallee de la Seine 2015-2020
  5. National Institute for Nuclear Physics (INFN) Commissione Scientifica Nazionale 5 (CSN5)
  6. PBCT PRIN: Progetti di Ricerca di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale - PRIN 2017 [2017XKWWK9]
  7. ERASMUS + Programme, Key Action 1, 2018/2019 - Student Mobility for Traineeship (Sapienza, University of Rome, Italy)
  8. PhD programme in Biotechnology (Biometec, University of Catania, Italy)
  9. PON AIM RI 2014-2020 [E66C18001240007]

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Glioblastoma (GBM) is one of the most lethal types of tumor due to its high recurrence level in spite of aggressive treatment regimens involving surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Hypoxia is a feature of GBM, involved in radioresistance, and is known to be at the origin of treatment failure. The aim of this work was to assess the therapeutic potential of a new targeted c-SRC inhibitor molecule, named Si306, in combination with X-rays on the human glioblastoma cell lines, comparing normoxia and hypoxia conditions. For this purpose, the dose modifying factor and oxygen enhancement ratio were calculated to evaluate the Si306 radiosensitizing effect. DNA damage and the repair capability were also studied from the kinetic of gamma-H2AX immunodetection. Furthermore, motility processes being supposed to be triggered by hypoxia and irradiation, the role of c-SRC inhibition was also analyzed to evaluate the migration blockage by wound healing assay. Our results showed that inhibition of the c-SRC protein enhances the radiotherapy efficacy both in normoxic and hypoxic conditions. These data open new opportunities for GBM treatment combining radiotherapy with molecularly targeted drugs to overcome radioresistance.

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