Raymond E, Soria J C, Izbicka E, Boussin F, Hurley L, Von Hoff D D
Department of Medicine, Institute Gustave-Roussy, Villejuif, France.
Invest New Drugs. 2000 May;18(2):123-37. doi: 10.1023/a:1006373812586.
Telomeres and telomerase have been subjects to a tremendous attention from scientists and oncologists during the past 5 years. This interest has been motivated by the potential of telomerase as a tumor marker for the diagnosis and the prognosis of cancer. The possible use of telomerase or telomeres as new targets for anticancer drugs also triggered investigations. The expression of telomerase was found in overall 85% of cancers. Telomerase is early expressed during oncogenesis with a gradient indicating that a high level of telomerase expression could be associated with a bad prognosis. Therefore, drugs targeting telomerase and telomeres might be useful in many human tumors with little restrictions regarding the tumor type or on the stage of the disease. Moreover, since telomerase is not or slightly expressed in normal cells, it has been postulated that drugs targeting telomerase would induce low toxicity. The race for the discovery of telomerase inhibitors has started while the identification of the components controlling telomerase, telomeres, cell survival, senescence, and apoptosis was still in progress. The recent identification of components regulating telomere length and telomerase expression (TRF1, TRF2, and tankyrase) opened a variety of new opportunities to control telomerase/telomere interactions. Meanwhile, a proof of principle was provided that changing telomere interactions with telomere binding proteins by chemical or biological means can induce cancer cell death. Interestingly, recent data challenge the old paradigm which suggested that a long exposure to telomerase and telomere inhibitors is necessary to induce anticancer effects. In this paper, we review the most recent information concerning the regulation of telomere length and telomerase expression, with emphasis on mechanisms that might translate into new drug discovery.
在过去五年中,端粒和端粒酶一直是科学家和肿瘤学家极为关注的对象。这种关注源于端粒酶作为癌症诊断和预后肿瘤标志物的潜力。将端粒酶或端粒用作抗癌药物新靶点的可能性也引发了相关研究。研究发现,总体上85%的癌症中存在端粒酶表达。端粒酶在肿瘤发生早期就开始表达,且呈现出一种梯度变化,这表明高水平的端粒酶表达可能与不良预后相关。因此,针对端粒酶和端粒的药物可能对许多人类肿瘤有用,且对肿瘤类型或疾病阶段的限制较小。此外,由于端粒酶在正常细胞中不表达或仅微弱表达,因此推测靶向端粒酶的药物毒性较低。在控制端粒酶、端粒、细胞存活、衰老和凋亡的成分仍在研究确定的同时,发现端粒酶抑制剂的竞争已经展开。最近对调节端粒长度和端粒酶表达的成分(TRF1、TRF2和端粒多聚腺苷酸聚合酶)的鉴定为控制端粒酶/端粒相互作用带来了各种新机遇。与此同时,有证据表明,通过化学或生物学手段改变端粒与端粒结合蛋白的相互作用可诱导癌细胞死亡。有趣的是,最近的数据对旧有的观念提出了挑战,即认为需要长时间暴露于端粒酶和端粒抑制剂才能产生抗癌效果。在本文中,我们综述了有关端粒长度调节和端粒酶表达的最新信息,重点关注可能转化为新药发现的机制。