| Literature DB >> 35800362 |
Deanna Tiek1, Shi-Yuan Cheng1.
Abstract
Cancer drug resistance is one of the main barriers to overcome to ensure durable treatment responses. While many pivotal advances have been made in first combination therapies, then targeted therapies, and now broadening out to immunomodulatory drugs or metabolic targeting compounds, drug resistance is still ultimately universally fatal. In this brief review, we will discuss different strategies that have been used to fight drug resistance from synthetic lethality to tumor microenvironment modulation, focusing on the DNA damage response and tumor metabolism both within tumor cells and their surrounding microenvironment. In this way, with a better understanding of both targetable mutations in combination with the metabolism, smarter drugs may be designed to combat cancer drug resistance.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer drug resistance; DNA damage; DNA repair; drug resistance; hypoxia; metabolism; overcoming resistance; synthetic lethality
Year: 2022 PMID: 35800362 PMCID: PMC9255237 DOI: 10.20517/cdr.2021.148
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Drug Resist ISSN: 2578-532X
Figure 1PARPi synthetic lethality in BRCA 1/2 non-functional tumors. BRCA 1/2 functional tumor cells will repair the double-strand break (DSB) induced by PARP inhibition and sequential replicative stress allowing cell survival and growth, whereas BRCA 1/2 non-functional cells cannot repair the DSB and therefore succumb to DNA damage-induced cell death. Figure created with BioRender.
Figure 2Lipid droplet usage in drug-resistant cells. Drug-resistant cells have been shown to increase lipid droplet accumulation (yellow circles) and have a higher percentage co-localized to the mitochondria, where an increase in PLIN4 helps to better utilize lipids for fatty acid beta-oxidation. Lipids can also be used as drug “sinks” for hydrophobic drugs. Figure created with BioRender.
Figure 3Therapy schematic. Broad-reaching drugs may lend to more durable responses as resistance can arise more rapidly to targeted therapy. Modulating more broad cancer hallmarks - like immune and metabolic targets - may offer smarter drug targets.