Dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.

Children and adults with the most aggressive form of brain cancer, malignant gliomas or glioblastoma, often develop cerebral edema as a life-threatening complication. This complication is routinely treated with dexamethasone (DEXA), a steroidal anti-inflammatory drug with pleiotropic action profile....

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Main Authors: Zheng Fan, Tina Sehm, Manfred Rauh, Michael Buchfelder, Ilker Y Eyupoglu, Nicolai E Savaskan
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3979667?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-78b988b431084341a914461ec9cadb932020-11-24T21:50:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0194e9326410.1371/journal.pone.0093264Dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.Zheng FanTina SehmManfred RauhMichael BuchfelderIlker Y EyupogluNicolai E SavaskanChildren and adults with the most aggressive form of brain cancer, malignant gliomas or glioblastoma, often develop cerebral edema as a life-threatening complication. This complication is routinely treated with dexamethasone (DEXA), a steroidal anti-inflammatory drug with pleiotropic action profile. Here we show that dexamethasone reduces murine and rodent glioma tumor growth in a concentration-dependent manner. Low concentrations of DEXA are already capable of inhibiting glioma cell proliferation and at higher levels induce cell death. Further, the expression of the glutamate antiporter xCT (system Xc-; SLC7a11) and VEGFA is up-regulated after DEXA treatment indicating early cellular stress responses. However, in human gliomas DEXA exerts differential cytotoxic effects, with some human glioma cells (U251, T98G) resistant to DEXA, a finding corroborated by clinical data of dexamethasone non-responders. Moreover, DEXA-resistant gliomas did not show any xCT alterations, indicating that these gene expressions are associated with DEXA-induced cellular stress. Hence, siRNA-mediated xCT knockdown in glioma cells increased the susceptibility to DEXA. Interestingly, cell viability of primary human astrocytes and primary rodent neurons is not affected by DEXA. We further tested the pharmacological effects of DEXA on brain tissue and showed that DEXA reduces tumor-induced disturbances of the microenvironment such as neuronal cell death and tumor-induced angiogenesis. In conclusion, we demonstrate that DEXA inhibits glioma cell growth in a concentration and species-dependent manner. Further, DEXA executes neuroprotective effects in brains and reduces tumor-induced angiogenesis. Thus, our investigations reveal that DEXA acts pleiotropically and impacts tumor growth, tumor vasculature and tumor-associated brain damage.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3979667?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Zheng Fan
Tina Sehm
Manfred Rauh
Michael Buchfelder
Ilker Y Eyupoglu
Nicolai E Savaskan
spellingShingle Zheng Fan
Tina Sehm
Manfred Rauh
Michael Buchfelder
Ilker Y Eyupoglu
Nicolai E Savaskan
Dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Zheng Fan
Tina Sehm
Manfred Rauh
Michael Buchfelder
Ilker Y Eyupoglu
Nicolai E Savaskan
author_sort Zheng Fan
title Dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.
title_short Dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.
title_full Dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.
title_fullStr Dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.
title_full_unstemmed Dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.
title_sort dexamethasone alleviates tumor-associated brain damage and angiogenesis.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Children and adults with the most aggressive form of brain cancer, malignant gliomas or glioblastoma, often develop cerebral edema as a life-threatening complication. This complication is routinely treated with dexamethasone (DEXA), a steroidal anti-inflammatory drug with pleiotropic action profile. Here we show that dexamethasone reduces murine and rodent glioma tumor growth in a concentration-dependent manner. Low concentrations of DEXA are already capable of inhibiting glioma cell proliferation and at higher levels induce cell death. Further, the expression of the glutamate antiporter xCT (system Xc-; SLC7a11) and VEGFA is up-regulated after DEXA treatment indicating early cellular stress responses. However, in human gliomas DEXA exerts differential cytotoxic effects, with some human glioma cells (U251, T98G) resistant to DEXA, a finding corroborated by clinical data of dexamethasone non-responders. Moreover, DEXA-resistant gliomas did not show any xCT alterations, indicating that these gene expressions are associated with DEXA-induced cellular stress. Hence, siRNA-mediated xCT knockdown in glioma cells increased the susceptibility to DEXA. Interestingly, cell viability of primary human astrocytes and primary rodent neurons is not affected by DEXA. We further tested the pharmacological effects of DEXA on brain tissue and showed that DEXA reduces tumor-induced disturbances of the microenvironment such as neuronal cell death and tumor-induced angiogenesis. In conclusion, we demonstrate that DEXA inhibits glioma cell growth in a concentration and species-dependent manner. Further, DEXA executes neuroprotective effects in brains and reduces tumor-induced angiogenesis. Thus, our investigations reveal that DEXA acts pleiotropically and impacts tumor growth, tumor vasculature and tumor-associated brain damage.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3979667?pdf=render
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