| Literature DB >> 31013740 |
Robert H Whitaker1, William J Placzek2.
Abstract
Chemotherapeutic targeting of microtubules has been the standard of care in treating a variety of malignancies for decades. During mitosis, increased microtubule dynamics are necessary for mitotic spindle formation and successful chromosomal segregation. Microtubule targeting agents (MTAs) disrupt the dynamics necessary for successful spindle assembly and trigger programmed cell death (apoptosis). As the critical regulators of apoptosis, anti-apoptotic BCL2 family members are often amplified during carcinogenesis that can result in MTA resistance. This review outlines how BCL2 family regulation is positioned within the context of MTA treatment and explores the potential of combination therapy of MTAs with emerging BCL2 family inhibitors.Entities:
Keywords: apoptosis; bcl2 family; cell cycle; cellular stress; chemotherapy; microtubule; microtubule targeting agents; mitosis; tubulin
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31013740 PMCID: PMC6523793 DOI: 10.3390/cells8040346
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cells ISSN: 2073-4409 Impact factor: 6.600
Figure 1Microtubule composition, structure, and microtubule targeting agents (MTA) binding sites. (A) Cartoon of microtubule consisting of 13 protofilaments formed from alpha (blue) and beta (brown) tubulin heterodimers. Vinca alkaloids (yellow) bind to the + end of the microtubule and taxanes (pink) bind inside the lumen (lower left). (B) Space Filling model an of alpha (Blue) beta (Brown) heterodimer with vinca alkaloid binding site (yellow) and taxane binding site (pink) located on beta tubulin [PDB: 3J8Y].
Figure 2BCL2 Family Structure, Function, and Equilibrium. (A) Surface structure of MCL1 (grey) with BH3 binding pocket, representative of the anti-apoptotic BCL2 family, bound to BIM BH3 Only protein (Black) with highlighted residues: Hydrophobic (Pink), conserved Glycine (red), and invariant Aspartic Acid (Yellow). [PDB: 2NL9] (B) BH3 Sequence homology between BCL2 effectors and selected BH3 Only proteins. (C) BCL2 Family Interactions Balance Cell Stress Signaling, where BCL2 family stoichiometry and affinity dictate cell fate.
MTA Efficacy and sensitivity within the context of the anti-apoptotic BCL2 proteins.
| MTA | Protein | Cell Type/Model | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paclitaxel | BCL2 | Breast, Lung, Prostate | * Presence sensitizes | [ |
| BCL2 | Leukemia | Presence induces resistance; paclitaxel decreases BCL2 mRNA expression | [ | |
| BCLxL | Leukemia, Colon | Upregulation induces resistance, inhibition sensitizes | [ | |
| BCLW | Leukemia | Knockdown/out sensitizes | [ | |
| BFL1/A1 | Leukemia | Upregulation induces resistance | [ | |
| Docetaxel | BCLxL | Lung, Myeloma | Inhibition sensitizes | [ |
| MCL1 | Prostate | * Inhibition or downregulation sensitizes | [ | |
| Vincristine | BCL2 | Leukemia | Treatment decreases BCL2 mRNA expression | [ |
| Vinblastine | MCL1 | HeLa | Treatment decreases MCL1 protein levels | [ |
| Vinflunine | BFL1/A1 | Lymphoma | Increase linked with resistance | [ |
* Denotes studies that were performed in both cell lines and mouse xenograft models.
BCL2 family inhibitors and their effect in combination with MTAs.
| BH3 Mimetic | MCL1 | BFL1/A1 | BCLW | BCLxL | BCL2 | Cell Type/Model | Effect | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| X | X | X | Melanoma, Breast, Prostate, Liver | Sensitizes cells to paclitaxel or docetaxel | [ | ||
|
| X | X | X | Prostate | Additive with vincristine; synergy with paclitaxel | [ | ||
|
| X | Leukemia, Lymphoma | Approved for CLL; sensitizes cells to paclitaxel | [ | ||||
|
| X | Colon | Sensitizes to Paclitaxel | [ | ||||
|
| X | X | X | X | X | Prostate | Sensitizes to docetaxel | [ |
|
| X | X | X | X | Breast | Synergizes with paclitaxel | [ | |
|
| X | Breast | Synergizes with docetaxel | [ | ||||
|
| X | [ | ||||||
|
| X | [ | ||||||
|
| X | [ |
Figure 3Mechanism of MTAs and BH3 Mimetics on BCL2 Family Signaling. MTAs induce cellular stress that leads to upregulation of pro-apoptotic BCL2 family proteins and ultimately apoptosis. Cancer cells can overcome this through upregulation of anti-apoptotic BCL2 family proteins. BH3 mimetics directly target the anti-apoptotic BCL2 family members to inhibit their suppression of BH3-only activators and/or of BAK/BAX oligomerization.