Revolutionary Brain Tumor Breakthrough Unveils Promising New Drug Treatments

Summary: In recent research, scientists have discovered that blood vessels feeding high-grade glioma brain tumors have high levels of LDL receptors (LDLR) on them. The study found that using drug-containing nanoparticle-based therapies to target these receptors can be a new way of treating cancer. Gliomas are the most common primary brain tumors and, due to their highly aggressive nature, have a poor prognosis with an average survival of only 4.6 months without treatment and approximately 14 months with optimal multimodal treatments. This research could pave the way for treating glioma brain tumors with LDL receptor-targeted nanoparticle-based therapies, thereby cutting off the energy supply of cancer cells.

Source: University of Nottingham

New research has shown that the blood vessels that feed aggressive brain tumors have receptors that could allow a new type of drug-containing nanoparticle to be used to starve the tumors of the energy they use to grow and spread, and also cause other disruptions to their adapted existence, even killing themselves.

Scientists from the University of Nottingham and Duke University have discovered that many of the blood vessels that feed high-grade glioma brain tumors have high levels of Low-Density Lipoprotein (LDL) receptors (LDLR) on them. The findings pave the way for using drugs already in development at both institutions that could target these receptors and so be taken up by the tumors.

The results have just been published in Pharmaceutics.

Gliomas are the most common primary brain tumors and originate from the glial cells of the brain. They are a heterogenous spectrum, from slow-growing to highly-aggressive infiltrating tumors.

Nearly half of all gliomas are classed as high-grade gliomas (HGG) and, due to their highly aggressive nature, have a dismal prognosis with an average survival of only 4.6 months without treatment and approximately 14 months with today’s optimal multimodal treatments.

The researchers examined tissue microarrays from intra- and inter-tumor regions of 36 adult and 133 pediatric patients to confirm LDLR as a therapeutic target. Expression levels in three representative cell line models were also tested to confirm their future utility to test LDLR-targeted nanoparticle uptake, retention, and cytotoxicity.

They showed widespread LDLR expression in adult and pediatric cohorts, and, importantly, also categorized the intra-tumor variation observed between the core and either rim or invasive regions of adult High-Grade Gliomas.

Dr Ruman Rahman from the University of Nottingham’s School of Medicine led the study and said: “Brain tumors can be very hard to treat with the current techniques available, this is because many of the drugs or nanoparticles that have been shown to work in cells, when used in tests of clinical treatments cannot penetrate the blood-brain barrier that many tumors sit behind. So, it’s vital we look for new ways to treat them.

These findings are a significant step in understanding the biology of tumors and how they gather energy to grow and spread from the body’s own fat and protein-containing lipoprotein particles. The key now is to use drug and prodrug nanoparticles to target these receptors and cut off the energy supply of the cancer cells.”

David Needham, Professor of Translational Therapeutics in the School of Pharmacy at the University of Nottingham and Professor of Mechanical Engineering and Materials Science at Duke University has been working on developing new, more clinically-effective, formulations of a common metabolic inhibitor (niclosamide) that cuts off the energy of cells and could be modified as a treatment for a number of diseases – including cancer.

In its original anti-parasitic application, niclosamide has been used for over 60 years, taken as oral tablets, killing tapeworms on contact in the gut by inhibiting their crucial metabolic pathway and shutting down their energy supply.

This same ability to lower the energy supply in a cell, has shown that niclosamide can also reduce the energy a virus needs to replicate (another formulation Needham has recently been developing as a nasal spray and early treatment throat spray for COVID-19 and other respiratory virus infections.

For the sprays, Needham figured out how to increase the solubility of niclosamide in simple pH buffered solutions (Needham 2022, Needham 2023). However, niclosamide’s poor solubility in water makes it very difficult to use elsewhere, such as in an intravenous (i.v.) injection or infusion.

Professor Needham, who has been investigating this drug as a possible treatment for cancer for a number of years and has been driving research in this area and is co-author on this study, said: “We know that niclosamide works by turning down the dimmer switch on host cells in the body, like in the nose as a preventative for COVID19 and other infections.  

“Cancer’s thought to have developed additional strategies to survive and so have very different metabolic processes than normal cells.  Niclosamide targets not only the energy production in the cells but also triggers other processes that result in what is called, Apoptosis, (self-killing) in the cells.  

“And now we know that brain tumors have LDL receptors that we think are used to feed their growth and metastatic spread we can work to modify the drug to target these and starve the cancer cells of their energy. Given that cancers feed on LDLS our strategy is to make the drug look like the cancer’s food.” 

Professor Needham and the team at Duke have developed the “Bricks to Rocks Technology” (B2RT) that makes this common low solubility drug (commonly called “brick dust”) into even less soluble “rocks” for the expressed purpose of making pure prodrug nanoparticles. 

This shows a brain
The findings pave the way for using drugs already in development at both institutions that could target these receptors and so be taken up by the tumors. Image is in the public domain

They converted niclosamide into a new less soluble (niclosamide stearate) prodrug that allows the formation of the injectable or implantable nanoparticles.  With data we have already obtained, the so-called “niclosamide stearate prodrug therapeutic” (NSPT) can stop the formation of lung metastases in a mouse model of Osteosarcoma (Reddy, Kerr et al. 2020), and also actually cure some dogs in a small canine feasibility study (Eward, Needham et al. 2023). 

Professor Needham continues: “This technology is now ready to be applied in other cancers, and Nottingham is ideally placed to develop this with the expertise at the Children’s Brain Tumour Research Centre.

“The next step will be to test the B2RT with Ruman and colleagues specifically in brain tumor cells, animal models and, if it shows promise, move it into patients as fast as feasibly and safely as possible.  We want to determine if and to what extent LDLR-targeted anti-cancer drug and prodrug nanoparticles can have activity in brain cancer, both injected intravenously and/or as post-surgical deposits.”

Such LDLR-targeted nanoparticles have already been developed as a feasible formulation by another School of Pharmacy researcher, Jonathan Burley and his recent PhD graduate George Bebawy who showed that they improved tumor cell uptake.  

Professor Needham adds: “We are now actively seeking industry and also government and infectious disease institute partners to help pursue preclinical and eventually clinical trials.    We’re keen to hear from anyone who thinks they can help to further the testing and development of this new technology.”

Summary generated with the help of ChatGPT AI technology

About this brain cancer research news

Author: Jane Icke
Source: University of Nottingham
Contact: Jane Icke – University of Nottingham
Image: The image is in the public domain

Original Research: Open access.
Low-Density Lipoprotein Pathway Is a Ubiquitous Metabolic Vulnerability in High Grade Glioma Amenable for Nanotherapeutic Delivery” by David Needham et al. Pharmaceutics


Abstract

Low-Density Lipoprotein Pathway Is a Ubiquitous Metabolic Vulnerability in High Grade Glioma Amenable for Nanotherapeutic Delivery

Metabolic reprogramming, through increased uptake of cholesterol in the form of low-density lipoproteins (LDL), is one way by which cancer cells, including high grade gliomas (HGG), maintain their rapid growth.

In this study, we determined LDL receptor (LDLR) expression in HGGs using immunohistochemistry on tissue microarrays from intra- and inter tumour regions of 36 adult and 133 paediatric patients to confirm LDLR as a therapeutic target.

Additionally, we analysed expression levels in three representative cell line models to confirm their future utility to test LDLR-targeted nanoparticle uptake, retention, and cytotoxicity.

Our data show widespread LDLR expression in adult and paediatric cohorts, but with significant intra-tumour variation observed between the core and either rim or invasive regions of adult HGG.

Expression was independent of paediatric tumour grade or identified clinicopathological factors. LDLR-expressing tumour cells localized preferentially within perivascular niches, also with significant adult intra-tumour variation. We demonstrated variable levels of LDLR expression in all cell lines, confirming their suitability as models to test LDLR-targeted nanotherapy delivery.

Overall, our study reveals the LDLR pathway as a ubiquitous metabolic vulnerability in high grade gliomas across all ages, amenable to future consideration of LDL-mediated nanoparticle/drug delivery to potentially circumvent tumour heterogeneity.

Join our Newsletter
I agree to have my personal information transferred to AWeber for Neuroscience Newsletter ( more information )
Sign up to receive our recent neuroscience headlines and summaries sent to your email once a day, totally free.
We hate spam and only use your email to contact you about newsletters. You can cancel your subscription any time.