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Drugs Targeting Tumor-Initiating Cells Prolong Survival in a Post-Surgery, Post-Chemotherapy Ovarian Cancer Relapse Model

Authors :
Brittney S. Harrington
Nathan D. Wong
Ian S. Goldlust
Rajarshi Guha
Jyoti Shetty
Elizabeth Jordan
Bao Tran
Lidia Hernandez
Michelle K. Ozaki
Craig J. Thomas
Christina M. Annunziata
Nicholas J Kalinowski
Marc Ferrer
Carrie D. House
Michael W Caminear
Source :
Cancers, Volume 12, Issue 6, Cancers, Vol 12, Iss 1645, p 1645 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2020.

Abstract

Disease recurrence is the major cause of morbidity and mortality of ovarian cancer (OC). In terms of maintenance therapies after platinum-based chemotherapy, PARP inhibitors significantly improve the overall survival of patients with BRCA mutations but is of little benefit to patients without homologous recombination deficiency (HRD). The stem-like tumor-initiating cell (TIC) population within OC tumors are thought to contribute to disease recurrence and chemoresistance. Therefore, there is a need to identify drugs that target TICs to prevent relapse in OC without HRD. RNA sequencing analysis of OC cells grown in TIC conditions revealed a strong enrichment of genes involved in drug metabolism, oxidative phosphorylation and reactive oxygen species (ROS) pathways. Concurrently, a high-throughput drug screen identified drugs that showed efficacy against OC cells grown as TICs compared to adherent cells. Four drugs were chosen that affected drug metabolism and ROS response: disulfiram, bardoxolone methyl, elesclomol and salinomycin. The drugs were tested in vitro for effects on viability, sphere formation and markers of stemness CD133 and ALDH in TICs compared to adherent cells. The compounds promoted ROS accumulation and oxidative stress and disulfiram, elesclomol and salinomycin increased cell death following carboplatin treatment compared to carboplatin alone. Disulfiram and salinomycin were effective in a post-surgery, post-chemotherapy OC relapse model in vivo, demonstrating that enhancing oxidative stress in TICs can prevent OC recurrence.

Details

ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancers
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1cb4909d6456c64187522b63e6604b04
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers12061645