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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Effect of alkyl-lysophospholipid on glioblastoma cell invasion into fetal rat brain tissue in vitro.

The antitumor effect of alkyl-lysophospholipid ( ALP) was studied on a continuous glioma cell line (GaMg) as well as on tumor spheroids obtained from three different primary brain tumor biopsies. GaMg monolayer growth was reduced by 50% after treatment with 30 microM ALP; cells accumulated in the G2M phase of the cell cycle as determined by flow-cytometric analyses. Tumor spheroid growth was reduced by 25 and 44% during treatment with 10 and 30 microM ALP, respectively. These drug concentrations also caused a severe destruction of spheroids. No effect on growth or morphology was seen in spheroids treated with 0.1 and 1.0 microM ALP. ALP caused a dose-dependent inhibition of invasion by GaMg tumor spheroids into brain aggregates. After 168 h of 1.0 microM ALP treatment, the volume of the intact brain aggregate was 90% larger than that in the untreated co-cultures. To further investigate the efficacy of ALP as an anti-invasive drug, co-cultures were performed with specimens obtained from three primary brain tumors: a highly invasive glioblastoma multiforme, an anaplastic astrocytoma, and an astrocytoma. Treatment of spheroids from the most invasive tumor with ALP caused a 7-fold preservation of normal brain tissue relative to control co-cultures. Moreover, the sensitivity of primary glioma spheroids to the anti-invasive effect of ALP seemed to be associated with the aggressiveness of the tumor; spheroids from the more malignant specimen (glioblastoma multiforme) were more sensitive than those from the less aggressive tumors. The anti-invasive effect seen with nontoxic concentrations of ALP may prove valuable in the treatment of malignant gliomas.[1]

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