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Blocking LDHA glycolytic pathway sensitizes glioblastoma cells to radiation and temozolomide.

Biochemical and biophysical research communications (2017-08-02)
Michael Koukourakis, Avgi Tsolou, Stamatia Pouliliou, Ioannis Lamprou, Maria Papadopoulou, Maria Ilemosoglou, Georgia Kostoglou, Dimitra Ananiadou, Efthimios Sivridis, Alexandra Giatromanolaki
ZUSAMMENFASSUNG

Up-regulation of lactate dehydrogenase LDHA, is a frequent event in human malignancies and relate to poor postoperative outcome. In the current study we examined the hypothesis that LDHA and anaerobic glycolysis, may contribute to the resistance of glioblastoma to radiotherapy and to temozolomide. The expression of LDH5 isoenzyme (fully encoded by the LDHA gene) was assessed in human glioblastoma tissues. Experimental in vitro studies involved the T98 and U87 glioblastoma cell lines. Their sensitivity to radiotherapy and to temozolomide, following silencing of LDHA gene or following exposure to the LDHA chemical inhibitor 'oxamate' and to the glycolysis inhibitor '2-deoxy-d-glucose' (2DG), was studied. Glioblastoma tissues showed strong cytoplasmic and nuclear LDH5 expression in 0-90% (median 20%) of the neoplastic cells. T98 and U87 cell lines showed that blocking glycolysis, either with LDHA gene silencing or exposure to oxamate (30 mM) and blockage of glycolysis with 2DG (500 μM), results in enhanced radiation sensitivity, an effect that was more robust in the T98 radioresistant cell line. Furthermore, all three glycolysis targeting methods, significantly sensitized both cell lines to Temozolomide. The current study provides evidence that a large subgroup of human glioblastomas are highly glycolytic, and that inhibitors of glycolysis, like LDHA targeting agents, may prove of therapeutic importance by enhancing the efficacy of radiotherapy and temozolomide against this lethal disease.

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MISSION® esiRNA, targeting human LDHA