Literature DB >> 14576849

Alterations in the apoptotic machinery and their potential role in anticancer drug resistance.

Scott H Kaufmann1, David L Vaux.   

Abstract

Anticancer drugs can potentially kill cells in two fundamentally different ways, by interfering with cellular processes that are essential for maintenance of viability or by triggering an endogenous physiological cell death mechanism. Apoptosis is a form of physiological cell death mediated by caspases, a unique family of intracellular cysteine proteases. Zymogen forms of these proteases are found in virtually all somatic cells, but remain latent until their activation is induced by ligation of specific cell surface receptors (the so-called "death receptors"), by mitochondrial alterations that allow release of cytochrome c and other intermembrane components, or possibly by other mechanisms. Most anticancer drugs activate the mitochondrial pathway. This apoptotic pathway is regulated by pro- and antiapoptotic members of the Bcl-2 family of proteins. Once activated, certain caspases might also be controlled by the inhibitor of apoptosis (IAP) proteins. Alterations in apoptotic pathway components or their regulators have been detected in a variety of cancers, suggesting that loss of the ability of cells to undergo apoptosis might contribute to carcinogenesis. Because cancer therapies such as radiation, glucocorticoids, and chemotherapeutic drugs exert their beneficial effects, at least in part, by inducing apoptosis of cancer cells, the same alterations in apoptotic pathways would be predicted to contribute to resistance. A key issue is whether the direct toxic activity of these treatments is of benefit when neoplastic cells contain changes that diminish their ability to undergo apoptosis.

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Year:  2003        PMID: 14576849     DOI: 10.1038/sj.onc.1206945

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Oncogene        ISSN: 0950-9232            Impact factor:   9.867


  69 in total

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5.  P53/PUMA are potential targets that mediate the protection of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)/TrkB from etoposide-induced cell death in neuroblastoma (NB).

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8.  Enhancement of the proapoptotic properties of newcastle disease virus promotes tumor remission in syngeneic murine cancer models.

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9.  The AF4-mimetic peptide, PFWT, induces necrotic cell death in MV4-11 leukemia cells.

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Review 10.  HtrA serine proteases as potential therapeutic targets in cancer.

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Journal:  Curr Cancer Drug Targets       Date:  2009-06       Impact factor: 3.428

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