| Literature DB >> 34142021 |
Zally Torres-Martinez1, Yamixa Delgado2, Yancy Ferrer-Acosta3, Ivette J Suarez-Arroyo4, Freisa M Joaquín-Ovalle1, Louis J Delinois1, Kai Griebenow1.
Abstract
Cancer cells can develop resistance to anticancer drugs, thereby becoming tolerant to treatment through different mechanisms. The biological mechanisms leading to the generation of anticancer treatment resistance include alterations in transmembrane proteins, DNA damage and repair mechanisms, alterations in target molecules, and genetic responses, among others. The most common anti-cancer drugs reported to develop resistance to cancer cells include cisplatin, doxorubicin, paclitaxel, and fluorouracil. These anticancer drugs have different mechanisms of action, and specific cancer types can be affected by different genes. The development of drug resistance is a cellular response which uses differential gene expression, to enable adaptation and survival of the cell to diverse threatening environmental agents. In this review, we briefly look at the key regulatory genes, their expression, as well as the responses and regulation of cancer cells when exposed to anticancer drugs, along with the incorporation of alternative nanocarriers as treatments to overcome anticancer drug resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer resistance; drug delivery systems; resistance genes
Year: 2021 PMID: 34142021 PMCID: PMC8208690 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2020.64
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Common classes of anticancer drugs
| Classification | Mechanism of action | Type of drug | Examples of drugs | Cancer type | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alkylating agents | Add alkyl groups to guanine on DNA; create cross links within the DNA | Platinum-based agents | Cisplatin
| Breast, Leukemia, Lymphoma, Multiple Myeloma, Sarcoma, Brain Cancer, Ovary, Lung | [ |
| Nitrogen mustards | Chlorambucil
| ||||
| Alkylsulfonates | Busulfan | ||||
| Antimetabolites | Interfere with vital metabolic pathways by acting as a false substrate during cell cycle synthesis phase | Pyrimidine antagonists | 5-Fluorouracil
| Leukemia, Breast, Ovary, Intestinal Tract, Pancreatic, Colorectal | [ |
| Purine antagonists | Fludarabine | ||||
| Purine analogs | 6-Mercaptopurine | ||||
| antifolates | Methotrexate | ||||
| Ribonucleotide reductase inhibitors | Hydroxyurea | ||||
| Mitotic spindle inhibitors | Inhibit microtubule polymerization causing disruption of mitotic spindle formation | Taxanes | Paclitaxel
| ALL, Burkitt lymphoma, Hodgkin lymphoma, Neuroblastoma, Rhabdomyosarcoma, Wilms tumor, NSCLC, Ovarian, Head and neck | [ |
| Vinca alkaloids | Vincristine
| ||||
| Topoisomerase inhibitors | Prevents resealing of DNA breaks | Topoisomerase inhibitors I and II | Topotecan
| Leukemia,
| [ |
| anti-tumor antibiotics | Different mechanisms (free radical formation, lipid peroxidation, direct membrane effects, and enzyme interactions) | Anthracyclines | Doxorubicin | ALL, AML, Hodgkin’s and non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma, Bladder, Breast, Metastatic cancers, Esophageal | [ |
| Daunorubicin | |||||
| Tyrosine kinase inhibitors | Blocks the action of tyrosine kinases | Small molecules inhibitors | Erlotinib
| Breast, CML, NSCLC, Lung, Renal, Hepatocellular, Prostate, Renal, Colorectal, ALL, GIST | [ |
Abbreviations: ALL: acute lymphocytic leukemia, AML: acute myeloid leukemia, CML: chronic myelogenous leukemia, NSCLC: non-small-cell lung carcinoma, GIST: gastrointestinal stromal tumors
Common chemotherapeutic drugs associated with cancer cell resistance#
| Chemotherapeutics | Cell cycle phase disrupted | Cellular pathways affected | Main resistance-related genes | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cisplatin | DNA repair /
| -DNA damage
| BRCA (1 and 2)- DNA damage repair | [ |
| Doxorubicin | DNA replication and DNA repair | -DNA structure changes --Formation of free radicals and oxidative damage | BCL-2- Cardiotoxicity to non-cancer cells | [ |
| Paclitaxel | Mitosis | -Cytoplasmic microtubule-assembling disruptor
| MDR1- Overexpression of P-gp, drug target alteration | [ |
| 5-Fluorouracil | DNA synthesis (DS) | -DS inhibition through thymidylate synthase targeting
| BCL-2, Bcl-XL and p53 overexpression
| [ |
#This is not an extensive list of all the drugs in chemotherapy that have acquired resistance. This table presents a list of the most well-known anticancer drugs used in chemotherapy for more than 20 years. BRCA: breast cancer genes; MDR1: multidrug resistance gene or P-glycoprotein-1; BCL-2: B-cell lymphoma 2
Mechanisms of anticancer drug resistance
| Mechanism | Short description | Ref. |
|---|---|---|
| Drug inactivation | Cancer cells generate an alternative mechanism that inactivates the drug that is inside the cell, contributing to modification, degradation, or complex formation. This inactivation decreases the drug’s toxicity levels, and reduces the damage and activity of the drug in cancer cells | [ |
| Alteration of drug target | Altered or unrecognized protein structure in the drug’s transporter protein due to accumulated mutations can prevent proper attachment of the drug on its binding site. As a consequence, cancer cells become unable to internalize the cytotoxic drug, leading to their survival | [ |
| Enhanced efflux pumps | The anticancer drug is pumped out of the cell through a transmembrane protein (efflux pump), preventing the accumulation of the effective drug concentration from causing toxicity in the cell, sabotaging the therapy | [ |
| DNA-damage repair | Cancer cells may gain the ability to repair the DNA damage/breakage caused by anticancer drugs as a response to promote cell survival | [ |
| Cell death inhibition | When proteins that induce cell death pathways (apoptosis, necrosis, or autophagy) are mutated or altered, they are unable to induce cell death | [ |
| Tumor cell heterogeneity | Cancer cells multiply at an uncontrolled rate, accumulating genetic mutations and epigenetic changes, which lead to resistance and affect their sensitivity to cancer drugs. The generation of cell heterogeneity leads to the development of stem cell-like properties on the new growing cells. The stemness effect is common in cancer cells that are in circulation | [ |
| Genetic factors | Include gene mutations, amplifications, and epigenetic alterations. Epigenetic events such as methylation and acetylation affect genetic expression leading to the silencing, overexpression, or amplification of oncogenes or tumor suppressor genes, resulting in the development of cancer drug resistance | [ |
Figure 1p21 overexpression effects after DNA damage. Excess p21 induces cell cycle inhibition or blockade of DNA replication
Drug delivery system nanoparticles# and their effect on cancer resistance
| DDS carrier | Nanoparticles modification | Encapsulated drug or toxic agent | Cells or tumor treated | Genes affected | Effect over resistance | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PLGA* | Dual RNAi delivery system (MDR1 and BCL2 siRNA) | Paclitaxel* and cisplatin* | ovarian cancer cells: SKOV3-TR and A2780-CP20 | MDR1 and BCL2 | Stimuli inhibition of drug efflux and cell defense pathways (enhanced drug sensitivity) | [ |
| PLGA* | PLGA-encapsulated Disulfiram | Disulfiram* | Hepatocellular carcinoma (Huh7, PLC/PRF/5) | CHD4 | Extended the half-life of Disulfiram | [ |
| PLGA* | Pluronic and chitosan surface- functionalized PLGA nanoparticles | Camptothecin* | Colon-26 cells (Colon cancer cells) | MDR1 | Downregulate the expression of MDR1 expression and enhanced tumor uptake. Induced tumor cell apoptosis, reduced systemic toxicity, and inhibited P-gp. | [ |
| PLGA* | PLGA-curcumin nanoparticles | Curcumin* | CAL27-cisplatin-resistant human oral cancer cells | MDR1
| Suppress the protein and mRNA expression levels of MDR1. Downregulate the protein levels of Bcl-2. Intrinsic apoptotic pathway through regulating the function of MDR1 and the production of ROS | [ |
| PEG* and PEI | hyaluronic acid (HA) based nanoparticle | MDR1 siRNA with paclitaxel* | SKOV-3TR and OVCAR8TR
| MDR1 | Down-regulation of MDR1 and P-gp expression. Inhibitory effect on the tumor growth. Decreased P-gp expression and increased apoptosis in MDR ovarian cancer mice model | [ |
| ModifiePEG-PE micelles | Tf-conjugated polymeric micelles | R547 (a potent and selective ATP-competitive CDK inhibitor) | A2780 ovarian carcinoma cells | P21 | [ | |
| Deoxycholic acid micelles | Folate-conjugated | Verapamil*, a P-gp inhibitor, and Paclitaxel* | MCF-7 and MCF-7/ADR (multi-drug-resistant variant), human breast carcinoma cell lines | MDR and P-gp | Verapamil-mediated overcome MDR solid tumors by targeting the delivery of micellar Paclitaxel into tumor cells. | [ |
| Cationic liposome DOTA/DOPE* | systematic nanodelivery platform encapsulating human p53 or oligonucleotide | Temozolomide* and p53 therapy | Human GBM cell lines U87, T98G, and LN-18 | p53 | DDS crosses the blood-brain barrier and efficiently targets cancer stem cells and tumor cells, activating apoptosis. | [ |
| Cationic liposome-PEG-PEI complex | Herceptin was non-covalently associated onto the surface of the nanocarrier | Curcumin* and doxorubicin* | SKBR3 (HER2-positive) and Hs578T (HER2-negative) breast cancer cells | HER2 | Cytotoxicity improved. Anti-proliferative effect increased. | [ |
| Micells TPGS* and siRNA | Herceptin-conjugated micelles | Docetaxel* and polo-like kinase 1 siRNA | MCF7 and SK-BR-3 cell lines Breast cancer cell | HER2 | Co-delivery of drugs was sustained and controlled | [ |
| amphiphilic polymer nanoparticle | coated magnetic iron oxide | Cisplatin* and near-infrared dye labeled HER2 antibody | SKOV3 ovarian cancer cell line. | HER2 | Inhibited the growth of the primary tumor, peritoneal, and lung metastasis in ovarian cancer. Shrinkage of tumor and primary tumors that had low levels of HER2. | [ |
| Nanodiamond | Epirubicin* nanodiamond complex | Epirubicin* | LT2-MYC cell line from murine hepatoblastoma tumor model | CHD4 | Nanodiamond-drug complex with epirubicin exhibited high stability and adsorption, promoting uptake and retention on tumor cells | [ |
| Nickel oxide | Nickel-containing nanoparticles | H460 human large cell lung cancer | NDRG1
| Activate a toxicity pathway characteristic of carcinogenic Ni compounds | [ | |
| Zinc oxide | ZnO nanoparticles | Jinghong-1 laying hen’s ovarian granulosa cells | NDRG1 | Upregulated the expression of NDRG1
| [ | |
| Silver nanoparticles | Ag nanoparticles | MCF7 (breast cancer) and HeLa (cervical cancer) cells | HIF-1 | HIF-1a signaling pathway disrupted and vascular endothelial growth factor to inhibit angiogenesis. | [ | |
| Silica matrix | microporous organosilica shell-coated cisplatin nanoparticle* | Cisplatin* and acriflavine | A549 lung cancer cells | HIF-1 | Synergistic co-delivery of drugs. Inhibit metastasis and enhancing cisplatin efficiency | [ |
| Solid lipid nanoparticles | PARP inhibitor to induce toxicity | Talazoparib* (BMN 673) | HCC1937 and HCC 1937R Triple-negative breast cancer | BRCA1 | DNA double-stranded breakage, G2/M cell cycle arrest and PARP (protein regulator of genomic stability) cleavage | [ |
| Titanium dioxide
| TiO2* nanoparticles | Titanium | Brain epithelial cells (brain microvasculature endothelial cells) and Male Fisher F344 rats | OCLN | Occludin protein is regulated while crossing blood-brain barrier with not affected integrity. Upregulation of tight junction proteins, modulation of P-gp mRNA expression | [ |
*Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved drug, polymer of particle. #All these DDS have been tested in vitro, in vivo or both, but none of them have been FDA approved. Abbreviations: PLGA: poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid); RNAi: RNA interference; siRNA: small interfering RNA; PEG: poly(ethylene glycol); PEI: polyetherimide; DOTA/DOPE: 1,2-dioleoyl-3-trimethylammonium propane/di-oleoyl phosphatidyl ethanolamine; TPGS: d-α-tocopherol polyethylene glycol succinate; PE: phosphatidylethanolamine; PARP: poly ADP ribose polymerase; BRCA: breast cancer gene; MDR1: multidrug resistance gene or P-glycoprotein-1; HIF: hypoxia-inducible factor; OCLN: occludin