Morphological and Molecular Biological Characteristics of Experimental Rat Glioblastoma Tissue Strains Induced by Different Carcinogenic Chemicals

Biomedicines. 2024 Mar 22;12(4):713. doi: 10.3390/biomedicines12040713.

Abstract

Glioblastoma (GBM) is a highly aggressive human neoplasm with poor prognosis due to its malignancy and therapy resistance. To evaluate the efficacy of antitumor therapy, cell models are used most widely, but they are not as relevant to human GBMs as tissue models of gliomas, closely corresponding to human GBMs in cell heterogeneity. In this work, we compared three different tissue strains of rat GBM 101.8 (induced by DMBA), GBM 11-9-2, and GBM 14-4-5 (induced by ENU).

Materials and methods: We estimated different gene expressions by qPCR-RT and conducted Western blotting and histological and morphometric analysis of three different tissue strains of rat GBM.

Results: GBM 101.8 was characterized by the shortest period of tumor growth and the greatest number of necroses and mitoses; overexpression of Abcb1, Sox2, Cdkn2a, Cyclin D, and Trp53; and downregulated expression of Vegfa, Pdgfra, and Pten; as well as a high level of HIF-1α protein content. GBM 11-9-2 and GBM 14-4-5 were relevant to low-grade gliomas and characterized by downregulated Mgmt expression; furthermore, a low content of CD133 protein was found in GBM 11-9-2.

Conclusions: GBM 101.8 is a reliable model for further investigation due to its similarity to high-grade human GBMs, while GBM 11-9-2 and GBM 14-4-5 correspond to Grade 2-3 gliomas.

Keywords: animal models; glioblastoma; high-grade tumor; intratumoral heterogeneity; tumor tissue strain.