Department of Cell and Molecular Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, 29425-5050, United States.
Biochem Pharmacol. 2012 Apr 15;83(8):1041-8. doi: 10.1016/j.bcp.2011.12.025. Epub 2011 Dec 26.
Development of resistance to chemotherapeutic drugs represents a significant hindrance to the effective treatment of cancer patients. The molecular mechanisms responsible have been investigated for over half a century and have revealed the lack of a single cause. Rather, a multitude of mechanisms have been delineated ranging from induction and expression of membrane transporters that pump drugs out of cells (multidrug resistance (MDR) phenotype), changes in the glutathione system and altered metabolism to name a few. Treatment of cancer patients/cancer cells with chemotherapeutic agents and/or molecularly targeted drugs is accompanied by acquisition of resistance to the treatment administered. Chemotherapeutic agent resistance was initially assumed to be due to induction of mutations leading to a resistant phenotype. This has also been true for molecularly targeted drugs. Considerable experience has been gained from the study of agents targeting the Bcr-Abl tyrosine kinase including imatinib, dasatinib and sunitinib. It is clear that mutations alone are not responsible for the many resistance mechanisms in play. Rather, additional mechanisms are involved, ranging from epigenetic changes, alternative splicing and the induction of alternative/compensatory signaling pathways. In this review, resistance to receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors (RTKIs), RTK-directed antibodies and antibodies that inactivate ligands for RTKs are discussed. New approaches and concepts aimed at avoiding the generation of drug resistance will be examined. The recent observation that many RTKs, including the IGF-1R, are dependence receptors that induce apoptosis in a ligand-independent manner will be discussed and the implications this signaling paradigm has on therapeutic strategies will be considered.
化疗药物耐药性的发展是癌症患者有效治疗的重大障碍。半个多世纪以来,人们一直在研究其分子机制,结果表明其并非由单一原因引起,而是存在多种机制,包括诱导和表达将药物泵出细胞的膜转运蛋白(多药耐药表型)、谷胱甘肽系统的变化和代谢改变等。用化疗药物和/或分子靶向药物治疗癌症患者/癌细胞时,会对所给予的治疗产生耐药性。最初认为化疗药物耐药性是由于诱导突变导致耐药表型。这对于分子靶向药物也是如此。从研究针对 Bcr-Abl 酪氨酸激酶的药物(包括伊马替尼、达沙替尼和舒尼替尼)中获得了大量经验。很明显,突变本身并不是导致许多耐药机制的原因。相反,还涉及其他机制,包括表观遗传变化、选择性剪接和替代性/补偿性信号通路的诱导。在这篇综述中,讨论了受体酪氨酸激酶抑制剂 (RTKI)、针对 RTK 的抗体和使 RTK 配体失活的抗体的耐药性。将研究旨在避免产生耐药性的新方法和概念。最近的观察表明,许多 RTK(包括 IGF-1R)是依赖性受体,它们以配体非依赖性方式诱导细胞凋亡,这将讨论这种信号模式对治疗策略的影响。