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Proapoptotic effects of ceranib-2 in combination with radiation therapy on human breast cancer cells.

Authors :
Tuğrul F
Vejselova Sezer C
Kutlu HM
Source :
European review for medical and pharmacological sciences [Eur Rev Med Pharmacol Sci] 2024 Mar; Vol. 28 (6), pp. 2322-2328.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Objective: Strategies for cancer therapy involve radiation therapy (RT), which accounts for about 40% of all cancer treatment types. As to current chemotherapeutics, cancer cells also develop resistance that remains a clinical problem, such as disease recurrence. Recent studies focused on understanding the molecular mechanisms of radiation-induced cell death. Conventional RT aims at treatment with a single fraction per day of 8-30 Gy per fraction. Radiotherapy increases intracellular ceramide levels that trigger cell death. Additionally, increasing intracellular ceramide by radiation may restore therapeutic sensitivity to cancer treatments. Drugs that inhibit ceramide-metabolizing enzymes like ceramidases are expected to be radiotherapy sensitizers.<br />Materials and Methods: In this research, we investigated the proapoptotic effects of SRS alone and in combination with ceranib-2, a ceramidase inhibitor in human breast adenocarcinoma cells. The molecular mechanism of action of RT and ceranib-2 was investigated on MCF-7 cells exposed to 13 µM ceranib-2 for 24 hours following 20 Gy radiation using MTT, radiotherapy, and annexin-V analyses.<br />Results: Results indicated that the dose of 20 Gy radiation induces apoptosis on human breast cancer cells with and without co-treatment with ceranib-2 by causing cytotoxicity in the cells. Based on the results of ceranib-2 exposure, it can be concluded that the mechanism of action may rely on an increase of intracellular ceramides, also called apoptotic lipids.<br />Conclusions: The study results suggest that co-treatment of human breast adenocarcinoma cells with a ceramidase inhibitor, ceranib-2, and a high dose of radiation of 20 Gy exerted cytotoxicity and apoptosis and might be a solid, potent alternative to current therapy strategies.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2284-0729
Volume :
28
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
European review for medical and pharmacological sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38567595
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.26355/eurrev_202403_35736