Autophagy inhibition synergizes with calcium mobilization to achieve efficient therapy of malignant gliomas

  • Ha Thi Vu
  • , Masahiko Kobayashi
  • , Ahmed M. Hegazy
  • , Yuko Tadokoro
  • , Masaya Ueno
  • , Atsuko Kasahara
  • , Yusuke Takase
  • , Naho Nomura
  • , Hui Peng
  • , Chiaki Ito
  • , Yasushi Ino
  • , Tomoki Todo
  • , Mitsutoshi Nakada
  • , Atsushi Hirao

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

20 Scopus citations

Abstract

Autophagy plays a critical role in tumorigenesis, but how autophagy contributes to cancer cells’ responses to chemotherapeutics remains controversial. To investigate the roles of autophagy in malignant gliomas, we used CRISPR/CAS9 to knock out the ATG5 gene, which is essential for autophagosome formation, in tumor cells derived from patients with glioblastoma. While ATG5 disruption inhibited autophagy, it did not change the phenotypes of glioma cells and did not alter their sensitivity to temozolomide, an agent used for glioblastoma patient therapy. Screening of an anticancer drug library identified compounds that showed greater efficacy to ATG5-knockout glioma cells compared to control. While several selected compounds, including nigericin and salinomycin, remarkably induced autophagy, potent autophagy inducers by mTOR inhibition did not exhibit the ATG5-dependent cytoprotective effects. Nigericin in combination with ATG5 deficiency synergistically suppressed spheroid formation by glioma cells in a manner mitigated by Ca2+ chelation or CaMKK inhibition, indicating that, in combination with autophagy inhibition, calcium-mobilizing compounds contribute to efficient anticancer therapeutics. ATG5-knockout cells treated with nigericin showed increased mitochondria-derived reactive oxygen species and apoptosis compared to controls, indicating that autophagy protects glioma cells from mitochondrial reactive oxygen species-mediated damage. Finally, using a patient-derived xenograft model, we demonstrated that chloroquine, a pharmacological autophagy inhibitor, dramatically enhanced the efficacy of compounds selected in this study. Our findings propose a novel therapeutic strategy in which calcium-mobilizing compounds are combined with autophagy inhibitors to treat patients with glioblastoma.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)2497-2508
Number of pages12
JournalCancer Science
Volume109
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 2018
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • autophagy
  • calcium signaling
  • drug screening
  • glioblastoma
  • mitochondria

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