4.7 Article

Indisulam Reduces Viability and Regulates Apoptotic Gene Expression in Pediatric High-Grade Glioma Cells

Journal

BIOMEDICINES
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines11010068

Keywords

carbonic anhydrase; cell metabolism; hypoxia; apoptosis; microenvironment tumor; pediatric high-grade glioma

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Pediatric high-grade glioma (pHGG) is a highly aggressive brain tumor. This study evaluated the effects of the drug Indisulam on pHGG cell lines. The results showed that Indisulam significantly reduced cell proliferation, clonogenic capacity, and promoted apoptosis. It also affected the expression of apoptotic proteins, suggesting a potential to overcome chemotherapy resistance.
Pediatric high-grade glioma (pHGG) is one of the most aggressive brain tumors. Treatment includes surgery, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, or combination therapy in children older than 3-5 years of age. These devastating tumors are influenced by the hypoxic microenvironment that coordinatively increases the expression of carbonic anhydrases (CA9 and CA12) that are involved in pH regulation, metabolism, cell invasion, and resistance to therapy. The synthetic sulphonamide Indisulam is a potent inhibitor of CAs. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of Indisulam on CA9 and CA12 enzymes in pHGG cell lines. Our results indicated that, under hypoxia, the gene and protein expression of CA9 and CA12 are increased in pHGG cells. The functional effects of Indisulam on cell proliferation, clonogenic capacity, and apoptosis were measured in vitro. CA9 and CA12 gene and protein expression were analyzed by RT-PCR and western blot. The treatment with Indisulam significantly reduced cell proliferation (dose-time-dependent) and clonogenic capacity (p < 0.05) and potentiated the effect of apoptosis (p < 0.01). Indisulam promoted an imbalance in the anti-apoptotic BCL2 and pro-apoptotic BAX protein expression. Our results demonstrate that Indisulam contributes to apoptosis via imbalance of apoptotic proteins (BAX/BCL2) and suggests a potential to overcome chemotherapy resistance caused by the regulation these proteins.

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