Miao Chenggui, Huang Yurong, Zhang Cheng, Wang Xiao, Wang Bing, Zhou Xinyue, Song Yingqiu, Wu Peng, Chen Zhe-Sheng, Feng Yibin
School of Chinese Medicine, Li Ka Shing Faculty of Medicine, The University of Hong Kong, 999077, Hong Kong; Center for Xin'an Medicine and Modernization of Traditional Chinese Medicine of IHM, Anhui University of Chinese Medicine, Hefei 230012, China; Department of Pharmacology, School of Integrated Chinese and Western Medicine, Anhui University of Chinese Medicine, Hefei 230012, China.
Department of Respiratory Medicine, Center of Infectious Diseases and Pathogen Biology, State Key Laboratory for Diagnosis and Treatment of Severe Zoonotic Infectious Diseases, The First Hospital, Jilin University, Changchun 130021, China.
Drug Resist Updat. 2025 Jan;78:101173. doi: 10.1016/j.drup.2024.101173. Epub 2024 Nov 21.
Resistance to antitumor drugs, antimicrobial drugs, and antiviral drugs severely limits treatment effectiveness and cure rate of diseases. Protein post-translational modifications (PTMs) represented by glycosylation, ubiquitination, SUMOylation, acetylation, phosphorylation, palmitoylation, and lactylation are closely related to drug resistance. PTMs are typically achieved by adding sugar chains (glycosylation), small proteins (ubiquitination), lipids (palmitoylation), or functional groups (lactylation) to amino acid residues. These covalent additions are usually the results of signaling cascades and could be reversible, with the triggering mechanisms depending on the type of modifications. PTMs are involved in antitumor drug resistance, not only as inducers of drug resistance but also as targets for reversing drug resistance. Bacteria exhibit multiple PTMs-mediated antimicrobial drug resistance. PTMs allow viral proteins and host cell proteins to form complex interaction networks, inducing complex antiviral drug resistance. This review summarizes the important roles of PTMs in drug resistance, providing new ideas for exploring drug resistance mechanisms, developing new drug targets, and guiding treatment plans.
对抗肿瘤药物、抗菌药物和抗病毒药物的耐药性严重限制了疾病的治疗效果和治愈率。以糖基化、泛素化、SUMO化、乙酰化、磷酸化、棕榈酰化和乳酸化为代表的蛋白质翻译后修饰(PTM)与耐药性密切相关。PTM通常是通过向氨基酸残基添加糖链(糖基化)、小蛋白(泛素化)、脂质(棕榈酰化)或官能团(乳酸化)来实现的。这些共价添加通常是信号级联反应的结果,并且可能是可逆的,其触发机制取决于修饰的类型。PTM不仅作为耐药性的诱导剂,而且作为逆转耐药性的靶点参与抗肿瘤耐药性。细菌表现出多种PTM介导的抗菌药物耐药性。PTM使病毒蛋白和宿主细胞蛋白形成复杂的相互作用网络,诱导复杂的抗病毒药物耐药性。本综述总结了PTM在耐药性中的重要作用,为探索耐药机制、开发新的药物靶点和指导治疗方案提供了新思路。