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A Systematic Comparison Identifies an ATP-Based Viability Assay as Most Suitable Read-Out for Drug Screening in Glioma Stem-Like Cells
- Source :
- Stem Cells International, Stem Cells International, Vol 2016 (2016)
- Publication Year :
- 2016
- Publisher :
- Hindawi Limited, 2016.
-
Abstract
- Serum-free culture methods for patient-derived primary glioma cultures, selecting for glioma stem-like cells (GSCs), are becoming the gold standard in neurooncology research. These GSCs can be implemented in drug screens to detect patient-specific responses, potentially bridging the translational gap to personalized medicine. Since numerous compounds are available, a rapid and reliable readout for drug efficacies is required. This can be done using approaches that measure viability, confluency, cytotoxicity, or apoptosis. To determine which assay is best suitable for drug screening, 10 different assays were systematically tested on established glioma cell lines and validated on a panel of GSCs. General applicability was assessed using distinct treatment modalities, being temozolomide, radiation, rapamycin, and the oncolytic adenovirus Delta24-RGD. The apoptosis and cytotoxicity assays did not unequivocally detect responses and were excluded from further testing. The NADH- and ATP-based viability assays revealed comparable readout for all treatments; however, the latter had smaller standard deviations and direct readout. Importantly, drugs that interfere with cell metabolism require alternative techniques such as confluency monitoring to accurately measure treatment effects. Taken together, our data suggest that the combination of ATP luminescence assays with confluency monitoring provides the most specific and reproducible readout for drug screening on primary GSCs.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Drug
Oncolytic adenovirus
lcsh:Internal medicine
Article Subject
media_common.quotation_subject
Pharmacology
Biology
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Glioma
medicine
Viability assay
lcsh:RC31-1245
Cytotoxicity
Molecular Biology
media_common
Confluency
Temozolomide
business.industry
Cell Biology
medicine.disease
030104 developmental biology
030220 oncology & carcinogenesis
Cancer research
Personalized medicine
business
Research Article
medicine.drug
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 16879678 and 1687966X
- Volume :
- 2016
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Stem Cells International
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....cd37612a26d7f47e2df990fbcf48826e