Glioblastoma (GBM), a highly malignant brain tumor, arises within a complex microenvironment that plays a critical role in facilitating tumor progression, ensuring survival, and enabling immune evasion, ultimately contributing to therapeutic resistance. Cancer-associated fibrosis is increasingly recognized as a key factor in the tumor pathophysiology, particularly in extracranial cancers, and reported therapeutic strategies in several cancers consist of the current use of the standard-of-care treatment combined with anti-fibrotic drugs. However, it remains unclear how the fibrotic changes associated with the GBM microenvironment contribute to the transformation of GBM from a chemosensitive state to a chemoresistant one. Here, we developed an in vitro model that mimics a fibrosis-like mechanism using the U-87MG GBM cell line. To achieve this, we identified the optimal experimental conditions (i.e., U-87MG cultured in serum-deprivation medium in the presence of recombinant TGF-B1 at 5 ng/mL for 72 h) that effectively induced fibrosis, as suggested by the counter-regulated expression of E- and N-cadherin and sustained levels of α-SMA and collagen I. As expected, U-87MG fibrotic cells were demonstrated to be more resistant to TMZ (predicted EC50 = 35 µM) as compared to the non-fibrotic counterpart (EC50 not achieved here; predicted EC50 = 351 µM). Accordingly, the anti-fibrotic uPAcyclin—a new derivative cyclic compound inspired as a A6 decapeptide drug—showed a significant cytotoxic effect, sensitizing resistant U-87MG fibrotic cells to TMZ. This highlights that targeting fibrosis may help to overcome TMZ resistance in GBM.

Establishment of U-87MG Cellular Fibrosis as a Novel in Vitro Model to Analyze Glioblastoma Cells’ Sensitivity to Temozolomide

Lopardo V.
Investigation
;
Esposito R. M.
Investigation
;
Pagano Zottola A. C.
Investigation
;
Puca A. A.
Writing – Review & Editing
;
Ciaglia E.
Conceptualization
2025

Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM), a highly malignant brain tumor, arises within a complex microenvironment that plays a critical role in facilitating tumor progression, ensuring survival, and enabling immune evasion, ultimately contributing to therapeutic resistance. Cancer-associated fibrosis is increasingly recognized as a key factor in the tumor pathophysiology, particularly in extracranial cancers, and reported therapeutic strategies in several cancers consist of the current use of the standard-of-care treatment combined with anti-fibrotic drugs. However, it remains unclear how the fibrotic changes associated with the GBM microenvironment contribute to the transformation of GBM from a chemosensitive state to a chemoresistant one. Here, we developed an in vitro model that mimics a fibrosis-like mechanism using the U-87MG GBM cell line. To achieve this, we identified the optimal experimental conditions (i.e., U-87MG cultured in serum-deprivation medium in the presence of recombinant TGF-B1 at 5 ng/mL for 72 h) that effectively induced fibrosis, as suggested by the counter-regulated expression of E- and N-cadherin and sustained levels of α-SMA and collagen I. As expected, U-87MG fibrotic cells were demonstrated to be more resistant to TMZ (predicted EC50 = 35 µM) as compared to the non-fibrotic counterpart (EC50 not achieved here; predicted EC50 = 351 µM). Accordingly, the anti-fibrotic uPAcyclin—a new derivative cyclic compound inspired as a A6 decapeptide drug—showed a significant cytotoxic effect, sensitizing resistant U-87MG fibrotic cells to TMZ. This highlights that targeting fibrosis may help to overcome TMZ resistance in GBM.
2025
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11386/4951955
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