3,691 research outputs found
Optimizing radiation therapy treatments by exploring tumour ecosystem dynamics in-silico
In this contribution, we propose a system-level compartmental population dynamics model of tumour cells that interact with the patient (innate) immune system under the impact of radiation therapy (RT). The resulting in silico - model enables us to analyse the system-level impact of radiation on the tumour ecosystem.
The Tumour Control Probability (TCP) was calculated for varying conditions concerning therapy fractionation schemes, radio-sensitivity of tumour sub-clones, tumour population doubling time, repair speed and immunological elimination parameters. The simulations exhibit a therapeutic benefit when applying the initial 3 fractions in an interval of 2 days instead of daily delivered fractions. This effect disappears for fast-growing tumours and in the case of incomplete repair. The results suggest some optimisation potential for combined hyperthermia-radiotherapy.
Regarding the sensitivity of the proposed model, cellular repair of radiation-induced damages is a key factor for tumour control. In contrast to this, the radio-sensitivity of immune cells does not influence the TCP as long as the radio-sensitivity is higher than those for tumour cells. The influence of the tumour sub-clone structure is small (if no competition is included). This work demonstrates the usefulness of in silico – modelling for identifying optimisation potentials
Change in radio sensitivity of mice under effect of rotation
Radiosensitivity of animals placed in slowly rotating chambers was investigated and was found to vary under the influence of the functional load on the vestibular analyzer. An increased radioresistance was registered in populations of the most radiosensitive mice. In populations of more radioresistant animals the gravitational load decreases the radioresistance
Dysfunctional telomeres in primary cells from Fanconi anemia FANCD2 patients
© 2012 Joksic et al. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.This article has been made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund.Background: Fanconi anemia (FA) is characterized by sensitivity to DNA cross-linking agents, mild cellular, and marked clinical radio sensitivity. In this study we investigated telomeric abnormalities of non-immortalized primary cells (lymphocytes and fibroblasts) derived from FA patients of the FA-D2 complementation group, which provides a more accurate physiological assessment than is possible with transformed cells or animal models. Results: We analyzed telomere length, telomere dysfunction-induced foci (TIFs), sister chromatid exchanges (SCE), telomere sister chromatid exchanges (T-SCE), apoptosis and expression of shelterin components TRF1 and TRF2. FANCD2 lymphocytes exhibited multiple types of telomeric abnormalities, including premature telomere shortening, increase in telomeric recombination and aberrant telomeric structures ranging from fragile to long-string extended telomeres. The baseline incidence of SCE in FANCD2 lymphocytes was reduced when compared to control, but in response to diepoxybutane (DEB) the 2-fold higher rate of SCE was observed. In contrast, control lymphocytes showed decreased SCE incidence in response to DEB treatment. FANCD2 fibroblasts revealed a high percentage of TIFs, decreased expression of TRF1 and invariable expression of TRF2. The percentage of TIFs inversely correlated with telomere length, emphasizing that telomere shortening is the major reason for the loss of telomere capping function. Upon irradiation, a significant decrease of TIFs was observed at all recovery times. Surprisingly, a considerable percentage of TIF positive cells disappeared at the same time when incidence of γ-H2AX foci was maximal. Both FANCD2 leucocytes and fibroblasts appeared to die spontaneously at higher rate than control. This trend was more evident upon irradiation; the percentage of leucocytes underwent apoptosis was 2.59- fold higher than that in control, while fibroblasts exhibited a 2- h delay before entering apoptosis. Conclusion:
The results of our study showed that primary cells originating from FA-D2 patients display shorten telomeres, elevated incidence of T-SCEs and high frequency of TIFs. Disappearance of TIFs in early response to irradiation represent distinctive feature of FANCD2 cells that should be examined further.This article is made available through the Brunel Open Access Publishing Fund. This work was supported by the Ministry of Education and Science of the Republic of Serbia (Project No.173046)
Antagonizing CD105 enhances radiation sensitivity in prostate cancer.
Radiation therapy is the primary intervention for nearly half of the patients with localized advanced prostate cancer and standard of care for recurrent disease following surgery. The development of radiation-resistant disease is an obstacle for nearly 30-50% of patients undergoing radiotherapy. A better understanding of mechanisms that lead to radiation resistance could aid in the development of sensitizing agents to improve outcome. Here we identified a radiation-resistance pathway mediated by CD105, downstream of BMP and TGF-β signaling. Antagonizing CD105-dependent BMP signaling with a partially humanized monoclonal antibody, TRC105, resulted in a significant reduction in clonogenicity when combined with irradiation. In trying to better understand the mechanism for the radio-sensitization, we found that radiation-induced CD105/BMP signaling was sufficient and necessary for the upregulation of sirtuin 1 (SIRT1) in contributing to p53 stabilization and PGC-1α activation. Combining TRC105 with irradiation delayed DNA damage repair compared to irradiation alone. However, in the absence of p53 function, combining TRC105 and radiation resulted in no reduction in clonogenicity compared to radiation alone, despite similar reduction of DNA damage repair observed in p53-intact cells. This suggested DNA damage repair was not the sole determinant of CD105 radio-resistance. As cancer cells undergo an energy deficit following irradiation, due to the demands of DNA and organelle repair, we examined SIRT1's role on p53 and PGC-1α with respect to glycolysis and mitochondrial biogenesis, respectively. Consequently, blocking the CD105-SIRT1 axis was found to deplete the ATP stores of irradiated cells and cause G2 cell cycle arrest. Xenograft models supported these findings that combining TRC105 with irradiation significantly reduces tumor size over irradiation alone (p value = 10-9). We identified a novel synthetic lethality strategy of combining radiation and CD105 targeting to address the DNA repair and metabolic addiction induced by irradiation in p53-functional prostate cancers
The influence of timeshift on ciradian rhythm of sensitivity to X-irradiation in mice
For two groups of male C3H mice an eastbound transmeridional flight was simulated by inducing a
time shift of the L:D schedule of 8 hr. The assumed flight brought about a maxima) reduction of the daily light
and dark span, respectively. A third group remained unshifted. At seven different times during the following
day, subgroups of the time shifted mice as well as of the group with unchange schedule were exposed to whole
body X-irradiation. Mortality and body temperature of each animal were registered for 30 days following
exposure and were regarded as indicators of radiation response. Radioresistance was found to be highest
during the second half of the daily light span, confirming earlier reports by other authors. Well defined effects of
the time shift and a corresponding shift of the acrophase of radioresistance could be demonstrated. There was no
significant difference between the two time shifted groups, but there was a consistent slight trend towards an
advantage for the group whose L:D shift resulted in a maximally reduced dark span
The first-in-class alkylating deacetylase inhibitor molecule tinostamustine shows antitumor effects and is synergistic with radiotherapy in preclinical models of glioblastoma
Background: The use of alkylating agents such as temozolomide in association with radiotherapy (RT) is the
therapeutic standard of glioblastoma (GBM). This regimen modestly prolongs overall survival, also if, in light of
the still dismal prognosis, further improvements are desperately needed, especially in the patients with O6-
methylguanine-DNA-methyltransferase (MGMT) unmethylated tumors, in which the benefit of standard treatment
is less. Tinostamustine (EDO-S101) is a first-in-class alkylating deacetylase inhibitor (AK-DACi) molecule that fuses
the DNA damaging effect of bendamustine with the fully functional pan-histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitor,
vorinostat, in a completely new chemical entity.
Methods: Tinostamustine has been tested in models of GBM by using 13 GBM cell lines and seven patient-derived
GBM proliferating/stem cell lines in vitro. U87MG and U251MG (MGMT negative), as well as T98G (MGMT positive),
were subcutaneously injected in nude mice, whereas luciferase positive U251MG cells and patient-derived GBM stem
cell line (CSCs-5) were evaluated the orthotopic intra-brain in vivo experiments.
Results: We demonstrated that tinostamustine possesses stronger antiproliferative and pro-apoptotic effects than
those observed for vorinostat and bendamustine alone and similar to their combination and irrespective of MGMT
expression. In addition, we observed a stronger radio-sensitization of single treatment and temozolomide used as
control due to reduced expression and increased time of disappearance of γH2AX indicative of reduced signal and
DNA repair. This was associated with higher caspase-3 activation and reduction of RT-mediated autophagy. In vivo,
tinostamustine increased time-to-progression (TTP) and this was additive/synergistic to RT. Tinostamustine had
significant therapeutic activity with suppression of tumor growth and prolongation of DFS (disease-free survival) and
OS (overall survival) in orthotopic intra-brain models that was superior to bendamustine, RT and temozolomide and
showing stronger radio sensitivity.
Conclusions: Our data suggest that tinostamustine deserves further investigation in patients with glioblastoma
Factors modifying the response of large animals to low-intensity radiation exposure
In assessing the biological response to space radiation, two of the most important modifying factors are dose protraction and dose distribution to the body. Studies are reported in which sheep and swine were used to compare the hematology and lethality response resulting from radiation exposure encountered in a variety of forms, including acute (high dose-rate), chronic (low dose-rate), combinations of acute and chronic, and whether received as a continuous or as fractionated exposure. While sheep and swine are basically similar in response to acute radiation, their sensitivity to chronic irradiation is markedly different. Sheep remain relatively sensitive as the radiation exposure is protracted while swine are more resistant and capable of surviving extremely large doses of chronic irradiation. This response to chronic irradiation correlated well with changes in radiosensitivity and recovery following an acute, sublethal exposure
Transient PP2A inhibition alleviates normal tissue stem cell susceptibility to cell death during radiotherapy
Abstract Unintended outcomes of cancer therapy include ionizing radiation (IR)-induced stem cell depletion, diminished regenerative capacity, and accelerated aging. Stem cells exhibit attenuated DNA damage response (DDR) and are hypersensitive to IR, as compared to differentiated non-stem cells. We performed genomic discovery research to compare stem cells to differentiated cells, which revealed Phosphoprotein phosphatase 2A (PP2A) as a potential contributor to susceptibility in stem cells. PP2A dephosphorylates pATM, γH2AX, pAkt etc. and is believed to play dual role in regulating DDR and apoptosis. Although studied widely in cancer cells, the role of PP2A in normal stem cell radiosensitivity is unknown. Here we demonstrate that constitutively high expression and radiation induction of PP2A in stem cells plays a role in promoting susceptibility to irradiation. Transient inhibition of PP2A markedly restores DNA repair, inhibits apoptosis, and enhances survival of stem cells, without affecting differentiated non-stem and cancer cells. PP2Ai-mediated stem cell radioprotection was demonstrated in murine embryonic, adult neural, intestinal, and hematopoietic stem cells
- …
