Literature DB >> 27355337

Sex steroid induced apoptosis as a rational strategy to treat anti-hormone resistant breast and prostate cancer.

V Craig Jordan1, Ping Fan1, Balkees Abderrahman1, Philipp Y Maximov1, Yousef M Hawsawi1, Poulomi Bhattacharya1, Niranjana Pokharel1.   

Abstract

The combined incidence and the extended disease course of breast and prostate cancer is a major challenge for health care systems. The solution for society requires an economically viable treatment strategy to maintain individuals disease free and productive, so as to avoid the fracture of the family unit. Forty years ago, translational research using the antiestrogen tamoxifen was targeted to estrogen receptor (ER) positive micrometastatic tumor cells and established the long-term antihormone adjuvant treatment strategy used universally today. The antihormone strategy was the accepted structure of cancer biology. Sex steroid deprivation therapy remains the orthodox strategy for the treatment of both breast and prostate cancer. Despite major initial therapeutic success, the strategies of long term anti-hormone therapies with either tamoxifen or aromatase inhibitors (AI) or antiandrogens or abiraterone for breast and prostate cancer, respectively, eventually lead to a significant proportion of anti-hormone resistant or stimulated tumor growth. Remarkably, a general principle of anti-hormone resistance has emerged for both breast and prostate cancer based primarily on clinical and supportive laboratory data. Paradoxically, anti-hormone resistant cell populations emerge and grow but are vulnerable to the cytotoxicity of estrogen or androgen-induced apoptosis for both breast and prostate cancer, respectively. These consistent anticancer actions of sex steroids appear to recapitulate the more complex mechanism of bone remodeling in elderly men and women during sex steroid deprivation. Estrogen is the key hormone in both sexes because in men androgen is first converted to estrogen. Estrogen regulates and triggers apoptosis in osteoclasts that develop during estrogen deprivation and destroy bone to cause osteoporosis. Sex steroid deprived breast and prostate cancer has recruited a streamlined natural apoptotic program from the human genome, but this is suppressed in the majority of sex steroid deprived tumors. Targeted strategies to neutralize cell survival pathways are now required to amplify and enhance sex steroid induced apoptosis. Successful blockade of the critical pathways for cell survival will introduce an inexpensive targeted therapy to maintain breast and prostate cancer patients indefinitely. Rotating anti-hormonal and sex steroid targeted cocktails could maintain patients at a microscopic tumor burden to enhance the quality of life, enhance survival, and maintain the family as a self-supporting and economically productive unit within society.

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Year:  2016        PMID: 27355337

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Discov Med        ISSN: 1539-6509            Impact factor:   2.970


  9 in total

1.  HMBA is a putative HSP70 activator stimulating HEXIM1 expression that is down-regulated by estrogen.

Authors:  Rati Lama; Chunfang Gan; Nethrie Idippily; Viharika Bobba; David Danielpour; Monica Montano; Bin Su
Journal:  J Steroid Biochem Mol Biol       Date:  2017-02-14       Impact factor: 4.292

Review 2.  Estrogen Receptor and the Unfolded Protein Response: Double-Edged Swords in Therapy for Estrogen Receptor-Positive Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Ping Fan; V Craig Jordan
Journal:  Target Oncol       Date:  2022-03-15       Impact factor: 4.864

Review 3.  BARD1 mystery: tumor suppressors are cancer susceptibility genes.

Authors:  Yousef M Hawsawi; Anwar Shams; Abdulrahman Theyab; Wed A Abdali; Nahed A Hussien; Hanan E Alatwi; Othman R Alzahrani; Atif Abdulwahab A Oyouni; Ahmad O Babalghith; Mousa Alreshidi
Journal:  BMC Cancer       Date:  2022-06-01       Impact factor: 4.638

4.  Nitric oxide is cytoprotective to breast cancer spheroids vulnerable to estrogen-induced apoptosis.

Authors:  Yana Shafran; Naomi Zurgil; Orit Ravid-Hermesh; Maria Sobolev; Elena Afrimzon; Yaron Hakuk; Asher Shainberg; Mordechai Deutsch
Journal:  Oncotarget       Date:  2017-10-07

Review 5.  A unifying biology of sex steroid-induced apoptosis in prostate and breast cancers.

Authors:  Philipp Y Maximov; Balkees Abderrahman; Ramona F Curpan; Yousef M Hawsawi; Ping Fan; V Craig Jordan
Journal:  Endocr Relat Cancer       Date:  2017-11-21       Impact factor: 5.678

6.  Endoxifen, 4-Hydroxytamoxifen and an Estrogenic Derivative Modulate Estrogen Receptor Complex Mediated Apoptosis in Breast Cancer.

Authors:  Philipp Y Maximov; Balkees Abderrahman; Sean W Fanning; Surojeet Sengupta; Ping Fan; Ramona F Curpan; Daniela Maria Quintana Rincon; Jeffery A Greenland; Shyamala S Rajan; Geoffrey L Greene; V Craig Jordan
Journal:  Mol Pharmacol       Date:  2018-05-08       Impact factor: 4.436

Review 7.  Prostate cancer and therapeutic challenges.

Authors:  Yousef MohammedRabaa Hawsawi; Samar Abdullah Zailaie; Atif Abdulwahab A Oyouni; Othman Rashed Alzahrani; Osama Mohamed Alamer; Saad Ali S Aljohani
Journal:  J Biol Res (Thessalon)       Date:  2020-12-10       Impact factor: 1.889

8.  Association of SNPs within TMPRSS6 and BMP2 genes with iron deficiency status in Saudi Arabia.

Authors:  Osama M Al-Amer; Atif Abdulwahab A Oyouni; Mohammed Ali Alshehri; Abdulrahman Alasmari; Othman R Alzahrani; Saad Ali S Aljohani; Noura Alasmael; Abdulrahman Theyab; Mohammad Algahtani; Hadeel Al Sadoun; Khalaf F Alsharif; Abdullah Hamad; Wed A Abdali; Yousef MohammedRabaa Hawasawi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2021-11-15       Impact factor: 3.240

9.  KM-express: an integrated online patient survival and gene expression analysis tool for the identification and functional characterization of prognostic markers in breast and prostate cancers.

Authors:  Xin Chen; Zhengqiang Miao; Mayur Divate; Zuxianglan Zhao; Edwin Cheung
Journal:  Database (Oxford)       Date:  2018-01-01       Impact factor: 3.451

  9 in total

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