| Literature DB >> 34742684 |
Vetriselvan Subramaniyan1, Shivkanya Fuloria2, Gaurav Gupta3, Darnal Hari Kumar4, Mahendran Sekar5, Kathiresan V Sathasivam6, Kalvatala Sudhakar7, Khalid Saad Alharbi8, Waleed Hassan Al-Malki9, Obaid Afzal10, Imran Kazmi11, Fahad A Al-Abbasi11, Abdulmalik Saleh Alfawaz Altamimi10, Neeraj Kumar Fuloria12.
Abstract
Epithelial growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a cell surface transmembrane receptor that mediates the tyrosine signaling pathway to carry the extracellular messages inside the cell and thereby alter the function of nucleus. This leads to the generation of various protein products to up or downregulate the cellular function. It is encoded by cell erythroblastosis virus oncogene B1, so called C-erb B1/ERBB2/HER-2 gene that acts as a proto-oncogene. It belongs to the HER-2 receptor-family in breast cancer and responds best with anti-Herceptin therapy (anti-tyrosine kinase monoclonal antibody). HER-2 positive breast cancer patient exhibits worse prognosis without Herceptin therapy. Similar incidence and prognosis are reported in other epithelial neoplasms like EGFR + lung non-small cell carcinoma and glioblastoma (grade IV brain glial tumor). Present study highlights the role and connectivity of EGF with various cancers via signaling pathways, cell surface receptors mechanism, macromolecules, mitochondrial genes and neoplasm. Present study describes the EGFR associated gene expression profiling (in breast cancer and NSCLC), relation between mitrochondrial genes and carcinoma, and several in vitro and in vivo models to screen the synergistic effect of various combination treatments. According to this study, although clinical studies including targeted treatments, immunotherapies, radiotherapy, TKi-EGFR combined targeted therapy have been carried out to investigate the synergism of combination therapy; however still there is a gap to apply the scenarios of experimental and clinical studies for further developments. This review will give an idea about the transition from experimental to most advanced clinical studies with different combination drug strategies to treat cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Breast cancer; Combination drugs; EGFR; NSCLC; Treatment strategies
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34742684 DOI: 10.1016/j.cbi.2021.109735
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Biol Interact ISSN: 0009-2797 Impact factor: 5.192