Mothersill Carmel, Seymour Colin
Medical Physics and Applied Radiation Sciences Unit, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
Curr Cancer Drug Targets. 2006 Aug;6(5):447-54. doi: 10.2174/156800906777723976.
A major problem in the search for new cancer drug targets is that the drugs are often toxic to normal tissues and require high doses to kill tumor cells. Therefore cellular targets which appear to involve low dose responses to cancer therapy are especially interesting since they could selectively target normal tissues which are not targeted by the treatment and thus may be responsible for unpleasant side effects or may be amenable to exploitation in order to improve the therapeutic ratio. One such target, which is the subject of this review, is radiation-induced bystander effects [RIBE], which result in the observation of radiation like responses in cells which have not been irradiated. RIBE is a novel phenomenon which indicates that at low doses, cell signaling is more important than direct DNA damage. Historically, DNA has always been considered to be the target for radiation therapy. The growing realization that signaling is important opens up several important therapeutic strategies which will be discussed in this review. RIBE appears to be the result of a generalized stress response in tissues or cells which is expressed at the level of the tissue, organ or organism rather than at the level of the individual cell. The signals may be produced by all exposed cells, but the response may require a quorum of cells in order to be expressed. The major response involving low LET (x- or gamma-ray) radiation exposure discussed in the existing literature is a death response. This has many characteristics of apoptosis but may be detected in cell lines without p53 expression, although the death response is suppressed in many tumor cell lines. While a death response in unirradiated normal cells around a tumor might appear to be adverse, it can in fact be protective and remove damaged cells from the population. If harnessed correctly, it could lead to the development of new drugs aimed not at tissue destruction but at enabling homeostatic mechanisms to control tumor expansion. In this scenario, the level of harmful or beneficial response will be related to the background damage, carried by the cell population, and the genetic programme determining response to damage. This focus may be important when attempting to predict the consequences of mixed therapies involving radiation and other cytotoxic agents. In this review, our current knowledge of the mechanisms underlying the induction of bystander effects by ionizing radiation is reviewed, and the question of how bystander effects may be harnessed to produce a new generation of anti-cancer drugs aimed at stabilization of tissue homeostasis rather than tissue destruction is considered.
寻找新的癌症药物靶点面临的一个主要问题是,药物往往对正常组织有毒性,需要高剂量才能杀死肿瘤细胞。因此,那些似乎涉及癌症治疗低剂量反应的细胞靶点尤其令人感兴趣,因为它们可以选择性地靶向未被治疗所针对的正常组织,这些组织可能会导致不良副作用,或者可以被利用来提高治疗比率。本文综述的一个这样的靶点是辐射诱导的旁观者效应(RIBE),即在未受辐射的细胞中观察到类似辐射的反应。RIBE是一种新现象,表明在低剂量时,细胞信号传导比直接的DNA损伤更重要。从历史上看,DNA一直被认为是放射治疗的靶点。信号传导很重要这一认识的不断加深开启了几种重要的治疗策略,本文将对此进行讨论。RIBE似乎是组织或细胞中一种普遍应激反应的结果,这种反应在组织、器官或生物体水平而非单个细胞水平上表达。信号可能由所有暴露的细胞产生,但反应可能需要一定数量的细胞才能表达。现有文献中讨论的涉及低传能线密度(x射线或γ射线)辐射暴露的主要反应是死亡反应。这具有许多凋亡特征,但在没有p53表达的细胞系中也可能检测到,尽管在许多肿瘤细胞系中死亡反应受到抑制。虽然肿瘤周围未受辐射的正常细胞中的死亡反应可能看起来是不利的,但实际上它可能具有保护作用,并从群体中清除受损细胞。如果正确利用,它可能会导致开发出新型药物,这些药物的目标不是组织破坏,而是使稳态机制能够控制肿瘤生长。在这种情况下,有害或有益反应的程度将与细胞群体所携带的背景损伤以及决定对损伤反应的遗传程序有关。在试图预测涉及辐射和其他细胞毒性剂的联合治疗的后果时,这一重点可能很重要。在本文综述中,我们回顾了目前对电离辐射诱导旁观者效应的潜在机制的认识,并考虑了如何利用旁观者效应来开发新一代旨在稳定组织稳态而非组织破坏的抗癌药物的问题。