Vigushin D M, Coombes R C
Department of Cancer Medicine, Imperial College, Hammersmith Campus, London W12 0NN, UK.
Curr Cancer Drug Targets. 2004 Mar;4(2):205-18. doi: 10.2174/1568009043481560.
The histone deacetylase inhibitors are a new class of cytostatic agents that inhibit the proliferation of tumor cells in culture and in vivo by inducing cell cycle arrest, differentiation and/or apoptosis. Histone acetylation and deacetylation play important roles in the modulation of chromatin topology and the regulation of gene transcription. Histone deacetylase inhibition induces the accumulation of hyperacetyl-ated nucleosome core histones in most regions of chromatin but affects the expression of only a small subset of genes, leading to transcriptional activation of some genes, but repression of an equal or larger number of other genes. Non-histone proteins such as transcription factors are also targets for acetylation with varying functional effects. Ace-tylation enhances the activity of some transcription factors such as the tumor suppressor p53 and the erythroid differentiation factor GATA-1 but may repress transcriptional activity of others including T cell factor and the co-activator ACTR. Recent studies in our laboratory and others have shown that the estrogen receptor alpha (ERalpha) can be hyperacetylated in response to histone deacetylase inhibition, suppressing ligand sensitivity and regulating transcriptional activation by histone deacetylase inhibitors. Conservation of the acetylated ERalpha motif in other nuclear receptors suggests that acetylation may play an important regulatory role in diverse nuclear receptor signaling functions. A number of structurally diverse histone deacetylase inhibitors have shown potent antitumor efficacy with little toxicity in vivo in animal models. Several compounds are currently in early phase clinical development as potential treatments for solid and hematological cancers both as monotherapy and in combination with cytotoxics and differentiation agents. This report reviews the biology and clinical development of histone deacetylase inhibitors for cancer therapy.
组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制剂是一类新型的细胞生长抑制剂,通过诱导细胞周期停滞、分化和/或凋亡来抑制培养的肿瘤细胞及体内肿瘤细胞的增殖。组蛋白乙酰化和去乙酰化在染色质拓扑结构的调节及基因转录的调控中发挥重要作用。组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制作用会导致染色质大部分区域高度乙酰化的核小体核心组蛋白积累,但仅影响一小部分基因的表达,从而导致一些基因的转录激活,却抑制数量相当或更多的其他基因。诸如转录因子等非组蛋白也是乙酰化的靶点,其功能效应各异。乙酰化可增强一些转录因子的活性,如肿瘤抑制因子p53和红系分化因子GATA-1,但可能抑制其他一些转录因子的活性,包括T细胞因子和共激活因子ACTR。我们实验室及其他机构最近的研究表明,雌激素受体α(ERα)可因组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制作用而发生高度乙酰化,从而抑制配体敏感性,并通过组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制剂调节转录激活。其他核受体中乙酰化ERα基序的保守性表明,乙酰化可能在多种核受体信号功能中发挥重要的调节作用。许多结构各异的组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制剂在动物模型体内已显示出强大的抗肿瘤功效且毒性极小。目前有几种化合物正处于早期临床开发阶段,作为实体癌和血液系统癌症的潜在治疗药物,可单独使用,也可与细胞毒性药物和分化剂联合使用。本报告综述了用于癌症治疗的组蛋白去乙酰化酶抑制剂的生物学特性及临床开发情况。