Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common primary brain tumor in adults with a short survival time after standard therapy administration including radiotherapy (RT) associated with temozolomide (TMZ). Here, we investigated the effects of radiochemotherapy in association with metformin (MET), a drug targeting cell metabolism on a syngeneic GBM mouse model using Positron Emission Tomography imaging with [18F]FLT and [18F]VC701 and single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis. The addition of drugs to RT significantly increased survival and [18F]FLT showed an early predictive response of combined therapy. We identified the presence of heterogeneous tumor populations with different treatment sensitivity and a complex immune evasive microenvironment. Tumor cells surviving to treatments showed immune response, among the main differentially modulated biological functions and a potential role of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) in treatment resistance. Association with TMZ or TMZ plus MET reduced the pro-tumor phenotype of immune reaction acting more on myeloid cells the first and on lymphocytes the latter. Off note, MET add-on counteracted the immune-evasive phenotype particularly of T cells suggesting a potential role of MET also in adopted immunity.

Valtorta, S., Granata, S., De Pretis, S., Bertoli, G., Redaelli, S., Berno, V., et al. (2025). Radio-chemotherapy and metformin selectively modulate the heterogeneous landscape of glioma with ribosome biogenesis, long non coding RNA and immune-escape markers as major player. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 21(8), 3527-3554 [10.7150/ijbs.103194].

Radio-chemotherapy and metformin selectively modulate the heterogeneous landscape of glioma with ribosome biogenesis, long non coding RNA and immune-escape markers as major player

Valtorta S.;Redaelli S.;Rainone P.;Coliva A.;Todde S.;Bentivegna A.;Di Muzio N.;Moresco R. M.
2025

Abstract

Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is the most common primary brain tumor in adults with a short survival time after standard therapy administration including radiotherapy (RT) associated with temozolomide (TMZ). Here, we investigated the effects of radiochemotherapy in association with metformin (MET), a drug targeting cell metabolism on a syngeneic GBM mouse model using Positron Emission Tomography imaging with [18F]FLT and [18F]VC701 and single-cell RNA-sequencing analysis. The addition of drugs to RT significantly increased survival and [18F]FLT showed an early predictive response of combined therapy. We identified the presence of heterogeneous tumor populations with different treatment sensitivity and a complex immune evasive microenvironment. Tumor cells surviving to treatments showed immune response, among the main differentially modulated biological functions and a potential role of long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs) in treatment resistance. Association with TMZ or TMZ plus MET reduced the pro-tumor phenotype of immune reaction acting more on myeloid cells the first and on lymphocytes the latter. Off note, MET add-on counteracted the immune-evasive phenotype particularly of T cells suggesting a potential role of MET also in adopted immunity.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Glioblastoma; LAG3; long-non coding RNA; metformin; PET imaging; radio-chemotherapy; single-cell RNA sequencing;
English
27-mag-2025
2025
21
8
3527
3554
none
Valtorta, S., Granata, S., De Pretis, S., Bertoli, G., Redaelli, S., Berno, V., et al. (2025). Radio-chemotherapy and metformin selectively modulate the heterogeneous landscape of glioma with ribosome biogenesis, long non coding RNA and immune-escape markers as major player. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 21(8), 3527-3554 [10.7150/ijbs.103194].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/558202
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