Glioblastoma is stage IV. glioma and is the most common form of a primary brain tumor of the central nervous system. Up to this day, it still classifies as one of the worst types of cancers due to its poor prognosis, as most patients live for only about 15 months after diagnosis. The standard and most effective treatment is surgical removal of the tumor, followed by chemotherapy with temozolomide (TMZ). In most cases, there is a recurrence of the tumor, which is the reason most patients succumb to the disease in less than a year. That is the main reason why this form of cancer is one of the deadliest. Due to the aggressive and invasive nature of glioblastoma and its high mortality, the disease is an increasingly common choice for finding new targets that would enable treatment and improve the chance of survival.
In this thesis we were focusing on one of those targets, the transmembrane protein FREM2 (FRAS1-related extracellular matrix protein 2), which has an important role when it comes to glioblastoma cell mobility. For our experiments, the glioblastoma cell lines U87MG and U251MG were used. We were researching the effect that FREM2 gene silencing has on cell migration and invasion. We successfully silenced the FREM2 gene with the use of siRNA. The effect of FREM2 silencing on cell migration and invasion was also monitored.
For experiments with immunofluorescence, we also treated cells with nanobodies NB3F18. When nanobodies bind to the FREM2 protein, they change its conformation and its function. We wanted to see if nanobody-treatment effects cytoskeleton remodeling. We were monitoring cytoskeletal proteins vimentin and actin, to observe changes in cytoskeleton reorganization in treated cells. Furthermore, we were comparing cytoskeleton of both cells treated with nanobodies and cells treated with siRNA to those of normal glioblastoma cells. No difference with vimentin was examined, but we assumed there would be some difference with actin cytoskeleton. Unfortunately, we had some problems when conducting experiments with β-actin and F-actin and were unable to confirm our theory. The experiments would need further optimisation and research.
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