| Literature DB >> 29879107 |
Angela Nebbioso1, Francesco Paolo Tambaro2, Carmela Dell'Aversana1, Lucia Altucci1.
Abstract
Defects in chromatin modifiers and remodelers have been described both for hematological and solid malignancies, corroborating and strengthening the role of epigenetic aberrations in the etiology of cancer. Furthermore, epigenetic marks-DNA methylation, histone modifications, chromatin remodeling, and microRNA-can be considered potential markers of cancer development and progression. Here, we review whether altered epigenetic landscapes are merely a consequence of chromatin modifier/remodeler aberrations or a hallmark of cancer etiology. We critically evaluate current knowledge on causal epigenetic aberrations and examine to what extent the prioritization of (epi)genetic deregulations can be assessed in cancer as some type of genetic lesion characterizing solid cancer progression. We also discuss the multiple challenges in developing compounds targeting epigenetic enzymes (named epidrugs) for epigenetic-based therapies. The implementation of acquired knowledge of epigenetic biomarkers for patient stratification, together with the development of next-generation epidrugs and predictive models, will take our understanding and use of cancer epigenetics in diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of cancer patients to a new level.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29879107 PMCID: PMC5991666 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pgen.1007362
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Genet ISSN: 1553-7390 Impact factor: 5.917
Fig 1Chromatin structure determines gene expression and hallmarks of cancer.
(A) Chromatin can assume active and repressive states. Repressive states are supercoiled and enriched for DNA and histone methylation marks; active states are accessible to transcription factors (TFs) and enriched for histone marks (such as H3K27ac and H3K4me3). Restrictive chromatin raises epigenetic barriers and blocks cell state transition, while permissive chromatin reduces epigenetic barriers and determines alternate cell states. (B) Aberrant permissive and restrictive chromatin states cause cancerogenesis and give rise to hallmarks of cancer.
Clinical trials for multiple myeloma and lymphomas.
| NCT number | Clinical trial | Condition | Drug | Phase | Sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01023308 | Panobinostat or placebo with bortezomib and dexamethasone in patients with relapsed multiple myeloma (PANORAMA-1) | Multiple myeloma | Panobinostat and bortezomib | 3 | Novartis Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT00274651 | A phase II clinical trial of PXD101 in patients with recurrent or refractory cutaneous and peripheral T-cell lymphomas (PXD101-CLN-6) | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Belinostat | 2 | Onxeo |
| NCT00412997 | LBH589 in adult patients with advanced solid tumors or cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Panobinostat | 1 | Novartis Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT00699296 | Study of oral LBH589 in patients with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and adult T-cell leukemia/lymphoma | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Panobinostat | 2 | Novartis Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT00490776 | Study of oral LBH589 inadult patients with refractory/resistant cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Panobinostat | 2/3 | Novartis Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT00425555 | Study of oral LBH589 in adult patients with refractory cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Panobinostat | 2/3 | Novartis Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT01486277 | A study of the histone deacetylase Inhibitor (HDACi) quisinostat (JNJ-26481585) in patients with previously treated stage Ib-IVa cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Quisinostat, 12 mg | 2 | Janssen Research & Development, LLC |
| NCT00007345 | Depsipeptide to treat patients with cutaneous T-cell lymphoma and peripheral T-cell lymphoma | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Romidepsin | 2 | National Cancer Institute |
| NCT01433731 | Safety, pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics study of SHP141 in IA, IB, or IIA cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | SHAPE | 1 | TetraLogic Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT02213861 | Efficacy, safety and tolerability study of SHAPE in IA, IB or IIA cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | Cutaneous T-cell lymphoma | SHAPE | 2 | TetraLogic Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT02082977 | A study to investigate the safety, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamics and clinical activity of GSK2816126 in subjects with relapsed/refractory diffuse large B-cell lymphoma, transformed follicular lymphoma, other non-Hodgkin's lymphomas, solid tumors and multiple myeloma | Cancer | GSK2816126 | 1 | GlaxoSmithKline |
| NCT01897571 | Open-label, multicenter, phase 1/2 study of Tazemetostat (EZH2 Histone Methyl Transferase [HMT] Inhibitor) as a single agent in subjects with adv. solid tumors or with B-cell lymphomas and tazemetostat in combination with prednisolone in subjects with DLBCL | B-cell lymphomas (phase 1) | Tazemetostat | 1/2 | Epizyme |
| NCT02395601 | A study evaluating CPI-1205 in patients with B-cell lymphomas | B-cell lymphoma | CPI-1205 | 1 | Constellation Pharmaceuticals |
The microRNAs associated with molecular subtypes of BC.
| Clinical subtypes | Overexpression | Underexpression |
|---|---|---|
| Luminal A | let-7c, let-7f | miR-206 |
| Luminal B | miR-342 | miR-100 |
| HER2-enriched | miR-142-3p | miR-125a/b |
| Triple negative | miR-18a/b | miR-29 |
Clinical trials for breast cancer.
| NCT number | Clinical trial | Condition | Drug | Phase | Sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT01194427 | A study of vorinostat and tamoxifen in newly diagnosed breast cancer | Stage I breast cancer | Vorinostat and tamoxifen | 2 | Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center |
| NCT00365599 | Phase II trial of SAHA and tamoxifen for patients with breast cancer | Breast cancer | Vorinostat and tamoxifen | 2 | H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center and Research Institute |
| NCT00828854 | A phase II, multicenter study of the effect of the addition of SNDX-275 to continued aromatase inhibitor (AI) therapy in postmenopausal women with ER-positive breast cancer whose disease is progressing | Estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer | Entinostat | 2 | Syndax Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT02820961 | Drug-drug interaction study of entinostat and exemestane in postmenopausal women with ER-positive breast cancer | Breast cancer | Entinostat and exemestane | 1 | Syndax Pharmaceuticals |
| NCT00616967 | Carboplatin and nab-paclitaxel with or without vorinostat in treating women with newly diagnosed operable breast cancer | Breast cancer | Carboplatin, Paclitaxel albumin-stabilized nanoparticle formulation, | 2 | Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center |
| NCT00368875 | Study phase I-II study of vorinostat, paclitaxel, and bevacizumab in metastatic breast cancer | Male breast cancer | Vorinostat | 1/2 | National Cancer Institute |
| NCT01010854 | Valproic acid in combination with FEC100 for primary therapy in patients with breast cancer (VPA-FEC100) | Breast cancer | VPA FEC100 | 2 | University of California, San Francisco |
| NCT00258349 | Vorinostat and trastuzumab in treating patients with metastatic or locally recurrent breast cancer | Breast cancer | Vorinostat | 1/2 | National Cancer Institute |
| NCT00567879 | A trial of panobinostat and trastuzumab for adult female patients with HER2-positive metastatic breast cancer whose disease has progressed on or after trastuzumab | Breast cancer | Panobinostat and trastuzumab | 1/2 | Novartis Pharmaceuticals |
Clinical trials for rhabdoid tumor.
| NCT number | Clinical trial | Condition | Drug | Phase | Sponsor |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NCT02601937 | A phase I study of the EZH2 inhibitor tazemetostat in pediatric subjects with relapsed or refractory INI1-negative tumors or synovial sarcoma | Rhabdoid tumors | Tazemetostat | 1 | Epizyme |
| NCT02601950 | A phase II, multicenter study of the EZH2 inhibitor tazemetostat in adult subjects with INI1-negative tumors or relapsed/refractory synovial sarcoma | Malignant rhabdoid tumors | Tazemetostat | 2 | Epizyme |
Fig 2Integrated genome-wide analysis.
Integrating and combining data from different platforms (genome-DNA sequence, transcriptome, proteome, metabolome, and epigenome) leads to a better understanding of the basis of cancer and paves the way toward personalized medicine.