Literature DB >> 26264276

Durability of Kinase-Directed Therapies--A Network Perspective on Response and Resistance.

Brion W Murray1, Nichol Miller2.   

Abstract

Protein kinase-directed cancer therapies yield impressive initial clinical responses, but the benefits are typically transient. Enhancing the durability of clinical response is dependent upon patient selection, using drugs with more effective pharmacology, anticipating mechanisms of drug resistance, and applying concerted drug combinations. Achieving these tenets requires an understanding of the targeted kinase's role in signaling networks, how the network responds to drug perturbation, and patient-to-patient network variations. Protein kinases create sophisticated, malleable signaling networks with fidelity coded into the processes that regulate their presence and function. Robust and reliable signaling is facilitated through network processes (e.g., feedback regulation, and compensatory signaling). The routine use of kinase-directed therapies and advancements in both genomic analysis and tumor cell biology are illuminating the complexity of tumor network biology and its capacity to respond to perturbations. Drug efficacy is attenuated by alterations of the drug target (e.g., steric interference, compensatory activity, and conformational changes), compensatory signaling (bypass mechanisms and phenotype switching), and engagement of other oncogenic capabilities (polygenic disease). Factors influencing anticancer drug response and resistance are examined to define the behavior of kinases in network signaling, mechanisms of drug resistance, drug combinations necessary for durable clinical responses, and strategies to identify mechanisms of drug resistance. ©2015 American Association for Cancer Research.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26264276     DOI: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-15-0088

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther        ISSN: 1535-7163            Impact factor:   6.261


  6 in total

1.  Potent Dual BET Bromodomain-Kinase Inhibitors as Value-Added Multitargeted Chemical Probes and Cancer Therapeutics.

Authors:  Stuart W Ember; Que T Lambert; Norbert Berndt; Steven Gunawan; Muhammad Ayaz; Marilena Tauro; Jin-Yi Zhu; Paula J Cranfill; Patricia Greninger; Conor C Lynch; Cyril H Benes; Harshani R Lawrence; Gary W Reuther; Nicholas J Lawrence; Ernst Schönbrunn
Journal:  Mol Cancer Ther       Date:  2017-03-23       Impact factor: 6.261

Review 2.  The extracellular matrix as a key regulator of intracellular signalling networks.

Authors:  Jordan F Hastings; Joanna N Skhinas; Dirk Fey; David R Croucher; Thomas R Cox
Journal:  Br J Pharmacol       Date:  2018-04-19       Impact factor: 8.739

3.  4H-Chromene-based anticancer agents towards multi-drug resistant HL60/MX2 human leukemia: SAR at the 4th and 6th positions.

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Journal:  Bioorg Med Chem       Date:  2016-02-01       Impact factor: 3.641

Review 4.  The crucial role of protein phosphorylation in cell signaling and its use as targeted therapy (Review).

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Journal:  Int J Mol Med       Date:  2017-06-22       Impact factor: 4.101

Review 5.  Epigenetic modification regulates tumor progression and metastasis through EMT (Review).

Authors:  Tingshan Tan; Pengfei Shi; Muhammad Nadeem Abbas; Yi Wang; Jie Xu; Yu Chen; Hongjuan Cui
Journal:  Int J Oncol       Date:  2022-04-21       Impact factor: 5.884

6.  Dual Specificity Kinase DYRK3 Promotes Aggressiveness of Glioblastoma by Altering Mitochondrial Morphology and Function.

Authors:  Kyeongmin Kim; Sungmin Lee; Hyunkoo Kang; Eunguk Shin; Hae Yu Kim; HyeSook Youn; BuHyun Youn
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2021-03-15       Impact factor: 5.923

  6 in total

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