Literature DB >> 14751504

Novel radiosensitizers for locally advanced epithelial tumors: inhibition of the PI3K/Akt survival pathway in tumor cells and in tumor-associated endothelial cells as a novel treatment strategy?

Oliver Riesterer1, Angela Tenzer, Daniel Zingg, Barbara Hofstetter, Van Vuong, Martin Pruschy, Stephan Bodis.   

Abstract

In locally advanced epithelial malignancies, local control can be achieved with high doses of radiotherapy (RT). Concurrent chemoradiotherapy can improve tumor control in selected solid epithelial adult tumors; however, treatment-related toxicity is of major concern and the therapeutic window often small. Therefore, novel pharmacologic radiosensitizers with a tumor-specific molecular target and a broad therapeutic window are attractive. Because of clonal heterogeneity and the high mutation rate of these tumors, combined treatment with single molecular target radiosensitizers and RT are unlikely to improve sustained local tumor control substantially. Therefore, radiosensitizers modulating entire tumor cell survival pathways in epithelial tumors are of potential clinical use. We discuss the preclinical efficacy and the mechanism of three different, potential radiosensitizers targeting the PTEN/PI3K/Akt survival pathway. These compounds were initially thought to act as single-target agents against growth factor receptors (PKI 166 and PTK 787) or protein kinase C isoforms (PKC 412). We describe an additional target for these compounds. PKI 166 (an epidermal growth factor [EGF] receptor inhibitor) and PKC 412, target the PTEN/PI3K/Akt pathway mainly in tumor cells, and PTK 787 (a vascular endothelial growth factor [VEGF] receptor inhibitor) in endothelial cells. Even for these broader range molecular radiosensitizers, the benefit could be restricted to human epithelial tumor cell clones with a distinct molecular profile. Therefore, these potential radiosensitizers have to be carefully tested in specific model systems before introduction in early clinical trials.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2004        PMID: 14751504     DOI: 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2003.09.050

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys        ISSN: 0360-3016            Impact factor:   7.038


  4 in total

1.  Inhibiting PI3K/Akt pathway increases DNA damage of cervical carcinoma HeLa cells by drug radiosensitization.

Authors:  Shu Xia; Shiying Yu; Qiang Fu; Fei Liu; Wei Zheng; Xiugen Fu; Yin Zhao
Journal:  J Huazhong Univ Sci Technolog Med Sci       Date:  2010-06-17

2.  Enzastaurin (LY317615), a protein kinase C beta selective inhibitor, enhances antiangiogenic effect of radiation.

Authors:  Christopher D Willey; Dakai Xiao; Tianxiang Tu; Kwang Woon Kim; Luigi Moretti; Kenneth J Niermann; Mohammed N Tawtawy; Chad C Quarles; Bo Lu
Journal:  Int J Radiat Oncol Biol Phys       Date:  2009-11-10       Impact factor: 7.038

Review 3.  Mechanistic Insights into Molecular Targeting and Combined Modality Therapy for Aggressive, Localized Prostate Cancer.

Authors:  Alan Dal Pra; Jennifer A Locke; Gerben Borst; Stephane Supiot; Robert G Bristow
Journal:  Front Oncol       Date:  2016-02-16       Impact factor: 6.244

4.  Synthetic mRNA-based gene therapy for glioblastoma: TRAIL-mRNA synergistically enhances PTEN-mRNA-based therapy.

Authors:  Xiangjun Tang; Hao Peng; Pengfei Xu; Li Zhang; Rui Fu; Hanjun Tu; Xingrong Guo; Kuanming Huang; Junti Lu; Hu Chen; Zhiqiang Dong; Longjun Dai; Jie Luo; Qianxue Chen
Journal:  Mol Ther Oncolytics       Date:  2022-02-02       Impact factor: 7.200

  4 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.