Cellular physiology and biochemistry : international journal of experimental cellular physiology, biochemistry, and pharmacology

Chloroquine may make bladder cancer cells more sensitive to radiation by blocking cell recycling and triggering cell death

Updated

Abstract

Chloroquine treatment resulted in a sensitization enhancement ratio of 1.53 for bladder cancer cells under radiation.

  • Chloroquine inhibited the proliferation of bladder cancer cells in a dose-dependent manner.
  • Low cytotoxic concentrations of chloroquine enhanced radiation sensitivity in bladder cancer cells.
  • Chloroquine weakened the repair of radiation-induced DNA damage.
  • The combination of radiation and chloroquine increased the apoptosis rate of EJ and T24 cells.
  • Chloroquine down-regulated Bcl-2 expression and up-regulated caspase-3 expression.
  • Autophagy markers were increased when chloroquine was combined with radiation, indicating that chloroquine inhibits radiation-induced autophagy.

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