Department of Cellular Biology, Laboratory of Neurobiology and Stem Cells NeuroCellT, Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Concepcion, Concepcion, Chile.
Faculty of Biological Sciences, Center for Advanced Microscopy CMA BIO BIO, University of Concepcion, Concepcion, Chile.
J Cell Physiol. 2021 Aug;236(8):5801-5817. doi: 10.1002/jcp.30264. Epub 2021 Jan 11.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common and aggressive brain tumor with a median survival of 14.6 months. GBM is highly resistant to radio- and chemotherapy, and remains without a cure; hence, new treatment strategies are constantly sought. Vitamin C, an essential micronutrient and antioxidant, was initially described as an antitumor molecule; however, several studies have shown that it can promote tumor progression and angiogenesis. Thus, considering the high concentrations of vitamin C present in the brain, our aim was to study the effect of vitamin C deficiency on the progression of GBM using a GBM model generated by the stereotactic injection of human GBM cells (U87-MG or HSVT-C3 cells) in the subventricular zone of guinea pig brain. Initial characterization of U87-MG and HSVT-C3 cells showed that HSVT-C3 are highly proliferative, overexpress p53, and are resistant to ferroptosis. To induce intraperiventricular tumors, animals received control or a vitamin C-deficient diet for 3 weeks, after which histopathological and confocal microscopy analyses were performed. We demonstrated that the vitamin C-deficient condition reduced the glomeruloid vasculature and microglia/macrophage infiltration in U87-MG tumors. Furthermore, tumor size, proliferation, glomeruloid vasculature, microglia/macrophage infiltration, and invasion were reduced in C3 tumors carried by vitamin C-deficient guinea pigs. In conclusion, the effect of the vitamin C deficiency was dependent on the tumor cell used for GBM induction. HSVT-C3 cells, a cell line with stem cell features isolated from a human subventricular GBM, showed higher sensitivity to the deficient condition; however, vitamin C deficiency displayed an antitumor effect in both GBM models analyzed.
多形性胶质母细胞瘤(GBM)是最常见和侵袭性最强的脑肿瘤,中位生存期为 14.6 个月。GBM 对放化疗高度耐受,且仍无法治愈;因此,不断寻求新的治疗策略。维生素 C 是一种必需的微量营养素和抗氧化剂,最初被描述为一种抗肿瘤分子;然而,多项研究表明,它可以促进肿瘤进展和血管生成。因此,考虑到大脑中存在高浓度的维生素 C,我们的目的是使用立体定向注射人 GBM 细胞(U87-MG 或 HSVT-C3 细胞)在豚鼠脑室下区生成的 GBM 模型来研究维生素 C 缺乏对 GBM 进展的影响。U87-MG 和 HSVT-C3 细胞的初步特征表明,HSVT-C3 细胞增殖能力强,过度表达 p53,对铁死亡有抗性。为了诱导脑室周围肿瘤,动物接受对照或维生素 C 缺乏饮食 3 周,然后进行组织病理学和共聚焦显微镜分析。我们证明,维生素 C 缺乏条件减少了 U87-MG 肿瘤中的肾小球样血管和小胶质细胞/巨噬细胞浸润。此外,在维生素 C 缺乏的豚鼠中,C3 肿瘤的大小、增殖、肾小球样血管、小胶质细胞/巨噬细胞浸润和侵袭均减少。总之,维生素 C 缺乏的影响取决于用于诱导 GBM 的肿瘤细胞。HSVT-C3 细胞是一种源自人脑室下 GBM 的具有干细胞特征的细胞系,对缺乏条件更为敏感;然而,维生素 C 缺乏在两种分析的 GBM 模型中均显示出抗肿瘤作用。