| Literature DB >> 29104700 |
Eudald Casals1, Muriel F Gusta1, Macarena Cobaleda-Siles1, Ana Garcia-Sanz1, Victor F Puntes1,2,3.
Abstract
Chemotherapeutic agents have limited efficacy and resistance to them limits today and will limit tomorrow our capabilities of cure. Resistance to treatment with anticancer drugs results from a variety of factors including individual variations in patients and somatic cell genetic differences in tumours. In front of this, multimodality has appeared as a promising strategy to overcome resistance. In this context, the use of nanoparticle-based platforms enables many possibilities to address cancer resistance mechanisms. Nanoparticles can act as carriers and substrates for different ligands and biologically active molecules, antennas for imaging, thermal and radiotherapy and, at the same time, they can be effectors by themselves. This enables their use in multimodal therapies to overcome the wall of resistance where conventional medicine crash as ageing of the population advance. In this work, we review the cancer resistance mechanisms and the advantages of inorganic nanomaterials to enable multimodality against them. In addition, we comment on the need of a profound understanding of what happens to the nanoparticle-based platforms in the biological environment for those possibilities to become a reality.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer resistance; Inorganic nanoparticles; Multifunctional; Multimodality; Resistance to treatment
Year: 2017 PMID: 29104700 PMCID: PMC5658477 DOI: 10.1186/s12645-017-0030-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Nanotechnol ISSN: 1868-6958
Description of the main mechanisms of cancer resistance, and treatment approaches offered by multifunctional nanoparticles
| Resistance mechanism | Description | NP-based treatment approach |
|---|---|---|
| Drug metabolism and drug target regulation | Anti-cancer treatments can induce the up-regulation of certain signalling pathways in order to develop resistance like amplification, drug metabolism or mutation of drug targets (Vinogradov and Wei |
|
| Efflux pumps | Drug efflux transporters—first described in reference (Juliano and Ling |
|
| Tumour microenvironment | The cellular environment in which the tumour exists can alter the response of tumour cells to chemotherapy and targeted therapies. It induces the production of secreted factors, which drives tumour growth, MDR and metastasis. Also, it creates a suitable environment for treatment resistance due to the high interstitial pressure (impeding drug penetration) and hypoxia (up-regulating other resistance signalling pathways) (Iyer et al. |
|
| Quiescent phenotypes | As conventional chemotherapy agents rely on blocking cell division to induce apoptosis, quiescent cells are not affected. Once the treatment is stopped, this remaining pool of cells can grow to repopulate the tumour. A significant tumour subpopulation displaying this phenotype are CSC, which also possess other intrinsic resistant properties (Dean et al. |
|
| Stemness | There are several signalling pathways and genes involved in CSC maintenance. The most studied are Hedgehog, Wnt, Notch, and Nanog. Different studies showed that they provide the necessary signals to remain in the stem cell state to self-renew, to guarantee tumour growth and they have also been related to chemotherapy resistance and metastases (Vinogradov and Wei |
|
| Apoptosis resistance | The up-regulation of oncogenes and the higher DNA repair capacity have been proved to make some tumoural cells more resistant to apoptosis. Additionally, the hypoxic microenvironment has been found to further induce apoptosis resistance, the hypoxia-inducible factors (HIF) up-regulate the factors of DNA-repair machinery (Milane et al. |
Fig. 1Schematic representation of different cancer treatment modalities that can be integrated in a single NP-based platform
Fig. 2Different advantages enabled by a NP platform for a multimodal approach to address cancer resistance