| Literature DB >> 31167407 |
Farzana Hossain1, Peter R Andreana2.
Abstract
Cancer cells of diverse origins express extracellular tumor-specific carbohydrate antigens (TACAs) because of aberrant glycosylation. Overexpressed TACAs on the surface of tumor cells are considered biomarkers for cancer detection and have always been prioritized for the development of novel carbohydrate-based anti-cancer vaccines. In recent years, progress has been made in developing synthetic, carbohydrate-based antitumor vaccines to improve immune responses associated with targeting these specific antigens. Tumor cells also exhaust more energy for proliferation than normal cells, by consuming excessive amounts of glucose via overexpressed sugar binding or transporting receptors located in the cellular membrane. Furthermore, inspired by the Warburg effect, glycoconjugation strategies of anticancer drugs have gained considerable attention from the scientific community. This review highlights a small cohort of recent efforts which have been made in carbohydrate-based cancer treatments, including vaccine design and the development of glycoconjugate prodrugs, glycosidase inhibiting iminosugars, and early cancer diagnosis.Entities:
Keywords: cancer diagnosis; cancer treatment; carbohydrate antigens; carbohydrate-based antitumor vaccines; iminosugar; warburg effect
Year: 2019 PMID: 31167407 PMCID: PMC6631729 DOI: 10.3390/ph12020084
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Illustration of immune response to cancer cells. (a) Vaccine constructs containing specific antigen(s) get internalized inside antigen-presenting cells (APCs) via endocytosis or binding with specific receptors. While inside APCs, immunogens get proteolyzed by immune proteasomes and divided into several peptide fragments containing antigen(s). If those fragments get loaded onto MHC I then they form MHC I complexes. The resulting complex is transported to the surface so that it can be recognized by CD8+ T-cells. Activated T-cells proliferate to give cytotoxic T-cells [23,27], (b) fragments binding with MHC II molecules result in an MHC II complex, which is then transported to the cell surface, activating CD4+ T-cells. Resulting activated cells can further activate B-cells, which present similar antigenic fragments with MHC II. Activated B-cells differentiate into clones of plasma and memory B-cells [23,27], (c) antibody-dependent cellular cytotoxicity (ADCC) occurs when IgG antibodies bind with tumor cells, presenting the target specific antigen(s), then Fc receptors of natural killer (NK) cells can recognize them and release granzymes (perforin, proteases, etc.), which causes lysis of tumor cells [28].
Figure 2Recent development of tumor-associated carbohydrate antigen (TACA) vaccines. (a) Multicomponent vaccine containing different TACAs [23,31], (b) entirely carbohydrate-based semi-synthetic vaccine with naturally occurring zwitterionic polysaccharide [34], (c) fully synthetic carbohydrate vaccine containing Pam3CysSerLys4, T-helper epitope, and Tn-MUC1 epitope [7,35].
Figure 3Glucose metabolism and prodrug route inside the cells: Glucose or glyco-conjugated pro drugs get internalized inside the cells via glucose transporters (GLUTs). Glucose metabolism follows either path a—anaerobic glycosylation; path b—aerobic glycosylation; or path c—cleavage of the active drug by a glycosydic enzyme.
Figure 4Glycoconjugated prodrugs for targeted delivery via GLUTs.
List of glycoconjugated prodrugs.
| Aglycons | Conjugated Sugars | Response of Glycoconjugates Compared to Aglycon in In-Vitro or In-Vivo | Transportation Mode | Ref(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chlorambucil | Peracetylated 2-fluorodeoxyglucose | Human fibroblasts, MCF-7 (25-fold more active) and Mice (Increased in MTD) | - | [ |
| Docetaxel | Glucose, galactose, mannose, xylose | B16 murine melanoma cells (3 to 18-fold more active) | - | [ |
| Docetaxel | galactose | Syngeneic P388 murine leukemia tumor model (equivalent) | - | [ |
| Paclitaxel | Glucose, glucuronic Acid | HUV-EC-C and CHO-K1, NCI-H838, Hep-3B, A498, MES-SA, HCT-116, NPC-TW01, MKN-45 (All less toxic) | Partially GLUT-1, /GLUT-3/GLUT-4 mediated | [ |
| Chlorambucil | Amino derivatives of glucose, mannose, galactose, xylose, lyxose, D-threoside | NCI-H460, A549, Du145, SKOV3, Hep3b, SF268, MCF7, HT29, HCT15, H1299 (induce decrease in cell growth) | - | [ |
| Benzylguanine | Glucose | HeLa S3 and HeLa MR cells (inhibition of | - | [ |
| Azomycin | Glucose | Several immortalized murine and human cancer cells (improved selectivity towards hypoxic tumor as radiosensitizer) | GLUTs mediated | [ |
| Adriamycin | 2-amino-2-deoxy-glucose | MCF-7, Bel-7402, HepG2, MDA-MB-231, U87MG, HELF, SKOV3, and S180, HELF and mice (enhance selectivity towards cancer cells) | GLUTs mediated | [ |
| Geldanamycin | Glucose, lactose, galactose | SW620, HT29, MCF7, K562 (one showed 3- to 40-fold enhanced activity with | - | [ |
| Platinum | Glucose | DU145, RWPE2 | GLUTs mediated | [ |
| Cadalene | Glucose, lactose, galactose | In vitro (less toxic) and in vivo (reduced tumor size) | - | [ |
| Ketoprofen | Glucose | Cross blood−brain barrier (BBB) | GLUTs mediated | [ |
| Nordihydroguaiaretic acid | Galactose, glucose | NCI/ADR-RES, Hep3B, MCF-7, HT-29 | - | [ |
Figure 5Biosynthetic pathways for N-glycans and iminosugars, inhibiting different glycosidase enzymes.
Figure 6Structures of different iminosugars.
List of iminosugars and their inhibitory effects.
| Amino Sugars | Glucosidase Inhibition | Other Anti-Tumor Activities | Ref (s) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Swainsonine | Lysosomal α-1-3- (IC50 0.70 nM) and α-1-6-mannosidase (K | Inhibits growth of tumor cells | [ |
| 1,4-Dideoxy-1,4-imino-D-mannitol | α-mannosidase, Lysosomal Golgi α-mannosidase II, glycogen phosphorylase | Human Glioblastoma and Melanoma Cells | [ |
| 1-Deoxymannojirimycin | α-1-2-mannosidase (IC50 0.02 mM), Golgi α-mannosidase II (IC50 400 µM) | Interact with recombinant tumor necrosis factor (rTNF) and recombinant interleukin 1 (rIL-1) | [ |
| 2-aminomethyl-5-(hydroxymethyl) pyrrolidine3,4-diol derivative | Jack bean α-Mannosidase (IC50 55 µM) | Inhibits growth of human glioblastoma cells and melanoma cells, DNA, synthesis of proteins | [ |
| Castanospermine | α- and β-glucosidases | Inhibitor of breast cancer | [ |
| 1-deoxynojirimycin | Glucosidase I and II | Anti-metastatic activity, reduce adhesion of tumor cells to vascular endothelium, inhibit cellular transformation, prevent morphological differentiation of endothelial cells | [ |
| (+)-Lentiginosine | amyloglucosidases | Inhibits ATPase and Chaperone Activity of Hsp90 | [ |
| Siastatin B | β-glucuronidase, NAG-ase | Antimetastatic activity | [ |
Figure 7Early detection of cancer (a) metabolic oligosaccharide engineering (MOE) technology, (b) glycan micro array strategies.