| Literature DB >> 26713603 |
Sanaz Yahyanejad1, Jan Theys1, Marc Vooijs1.
Abstract
Radiotherapy represents an important therapeutic strategy in the treatment of cancer cells. However, it often fails to eliminate all tumor cells because of the intrinsic or acquired treatment resistance, which is the most common cause of tumor recurrence. Emerging evidences suggest that the Notch signaling pathway is an important pathway mediating radiation resistance in tumor cells. Successful targeting of Notch signaling requires a thorough understanding of Notch regulation and the context-dependent interactions between Notch and other therapeutically relevant pathways. Understanding these interactions will increase our ability to design rational combination regimens that are more likely to be safe and effective. Here we summarize the role of Notch in mediating resistance to radiotherapy, the different strategies to block Notch in cancer cells and how treatment scheduling can improve tumor response. Finally, we discuss a need for reliable Notch related biomarkers in specific tumors to measure pathway activity and to allow identification of a subset of patients who are likely to benefit from Notch targeted therapies.Entities:
Keywords: Notch; Notch inhibitor; personalized treatment; radiotherapy; treatment resistance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26713603 PMCID: PMC4884942 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.6714
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Figure 1Notch signaling pathway and potential drug intervention sites (see text for details)
1) Furin cleavage at S1 site can be inhibited. 2) Notch antibodies targeting Notch receptors 3) or ligands would target individual receptor pathway 4) Targeting the interaction of Notch receptor with ligand after receptor maturation abrogates the pathway activity 5) Cleavage by a disintegrin and metalloproteinase Adam10 at S2 site and 6) γ-secretase complex at S3 site can be inhibited to limit Notch signaling. 7) Interfering with NICD/CSL interaction using small peptides disrupts the canonical Notch pathway signaling. 8) Inhibition of endosomal Notch trafficking could potentially reduce Notch signaling activity regardless of ligand activity. The Notch receptor is comprised of a Notch extracellular domain (NECD) and Notch intracellular domain (NICD). EGFR: epidermal growth factor repeats; HD: heterodimerization domain; NRR: negative regulatory region; LNR: cysteine-rich LNR repeats; RAM: RAM domain; NLS: nuclear localization signals; ANK: ankyrin repeat domain; NCR: cysteine response region; TAD: transactivation domain; PEST: region rich in proline (P), glutamine (E), serine (S) and threonine (T) residues.
Possible sites to intervene in Notch pathway
| Intervening Notch at various sites | Mechanism of action | Pre-clinical studies | Clinical studies |
|---|---|---|---|
| S1 cleavage | - Inhibition of Furin and block receptor maturation | - Not reported (experimental studies available) | - Not Reported |
| Receptor | - Unresponsive receptor to ligand binding by targeting NRR in case of Notch1,2 and 3 | - Anti-Notch1, Notch2 [ | - Anti-Notch2, Notch3 [ |
| Ligand | - Non-functional vasculature | - [ | - [ |
| Receptor-Ligand Interaction | - Ligand dependent Notch antagonist | - [ | - Not reported |
| S2 cleavage | - Targeting both Adam metalloprotease 10/17 and block ectodomain shedding | - [ | - [ |
| S3 cleavage | - Inhibition of different subunits of γ-secretase complex and block NICD release | - [ | - [ |
| NICD-CSL interaction | - Suppressing transcriptional activation by preventing binding of MAML1 to the ICN–CSL complex | - [ | - Not reported |
| Endosomal activation | - Disrupting γ-secretase cleavage in acidic endosome | - [ | - Not Reported |