Molecular Oncology (Feb 2024)

High‐content screening of drug combinations of an mPGES‐1 inhibitor in multicellular tumor spheroids leads to mechanistic insights into neuroblastoma chemoresistance

  • Ahlem Zaghmi,
  • Erdem Aybay,
  • Long Jiang,
  • Mingmei Shang,
  • Julia Steinmetz‐Späh,
  • Fredrik Wermeling,
  • Per Kogner,
  • Marina Korotkova,
  • Päivi Östling,
  • Per‐Johan Jakobsson,
  • Brinton Seashore‐Ludlow,
  • Karin Larsson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/1878-0261.13502
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
pp. 317 – 335

Abstract

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High‐throughput drug screening enables the discovery of new anticancer drugs. Although monolayer cell cultures are commonly used for screening, their limited complexity and translational efficiency require alternative models. Three‐dimensional cell cultures, such as multicellular tumor spheroids (MCTS), mimic tumor architecture and offer promising opportunities for drug discovery. In this study, we developed a neuroblastoma MCTS model for high‐content drug screening. We also aimed to decipher the mechanisms underlying synergistic drug combinations in this disease model. Several agents from different therapeutic categories and with different mechanisms of action were tested alone or in combination with selective inhibition of prostaglandin E2 by pharmacological inhibition of microsomal prostaglandin E synthase‐1 (mPGES‐1). After a systematic investigation of the sensitivity of individual agents and the effects of pairwise combinations, GFP‐transfected MCTS were used in a confirmatory screen to validate the hits. Finally, inhibitory effects on multidrug resistance proteins were examined. In summary, we demonstrate how MCTS‐based high‐throughput drug screening has the potential to uncover effective drug combinations and provide insights into the mechanism of synergy between an mPGES‐1 inhibitor and chemotherapeutic agents.

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