EBSCO Logo
Connecting you to content on EBSCOhost
Results
Title

Lovastatin and phenylacetate induce apoptosis, but not differentiation, in human malignant glioma cells.

Authors

Schmidt, Friederike; Groscurth, Peter; Kermer, Monika; Dichgans, Johannes; Weller, Michael

Abstract

Induction of differentiation is an attractive approach to the management of infiltrative tumors such as malignant glioma. Here, we report that lovastatin and phenylacetate induce apoptosis, but fail to induce differentiation, in malignant glioma cell lines and untransformed rat astrocytes. Lovastatin and phenylacetate promote p21 accumulation but fail to induce cell cycle arrest. BCL-2 gene transfer inhibits apoptosis induced by lovastatin but not apoptosis induced by phenylacetate. Wild-type p53 gene transfer promotes lovastatin-induced apoptosis in p53 wild-type LN-229 cells but not in p53 mutant T98G cells. Phenylacetate-induced apoptosis is attenuated by wild-type p53 gene transfer in both cell lines. Neither lovastatin nor phenylacetate modulate glioma cell sensitivity to CD95 ligand-induced apoptosis or cancer chemotherapy. Thus, this study provides no rationale for clinical trials of lovastatin or phenylacetate in the differentiation therapy of malignant glioma. We conclude that neoplastic glioma cells as well as untransformed rat astrocytes are refractory to the induction of differentiation by lovastatin and phenylacetate.

Subjects

PHENYLACETATES; APOPTOSIS; GLIOMAS; NERVOUS system tumors; CELLS; GENETIC transformation; NEUROGLIA

Publication

Acta Neuropathologica, 2001, Vol 101, Issue 3, p217

ISSN

0001-6322

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.1007/s004010000254

EBSCO Connect | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Copyright | Manage my cookies
Journals | Subjects | Sitemap
© 2025 EBSCO Industries, Inc. All rights reserved