This is my favorite article - a wealth of information!
<!--[if gte mso 9]>
<![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 9]>
Normal
0
false
false
false
EN-US
X-NONE
X-NONE
<![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 9]>
<![endif]--><!--[if gte mso 10]>
<![endif]-->
By Tia Ghose / November 30, 2011
When cancer cells are first
discovered, many drugs can blast them into oblivion. But over time, cancers
begin to withstand those first line drugs and continue to grow and spread.
“If you already have 1010
tumor cells, the chances are you’re going to have some kind of resistance
develop,” said William Pao, a physician scientist at Vanderbilt University, who
first uncovered mechanisms of drug resistance in lung cancer. “Even if you kill
99.9 percent of cells you’re still left with a ton of cells which then can
start to grow.”
A long-standing hurdle in cancer
therapy, researchers are now making inroads into understanding how cancer cells
acquire drug resistance, and they’re finding that genetic mutations are just
one of many strategies cancers use to evade death. Cancer cells have been found
to boost transcription of survival genes, drill out the cores of transport
proteins, or even employ alternate protein configurations to avoid extinction.
While researchers are learning to apply the findings to overcome specific types
of drug resistance, it’s quickly becoming clear that there is no single pathway
tumors use to avoid cancer drugs, and that the problem of cancer resistance is
far from over.
Genetic changes
Each of the many cancer cells in a
tumor can have slight genetic variations. While the vast majority of cells in a
tumor may be susceptible to a drug, a few cells can harbor mutations that allow
it to withstand the toxic assault. Over time, all the susceptible cells
die off, while those which are resistant proliferate.
This selective pressure allows
breast and other cancers to acquire resistance to the platinum-based
chemotherapy drug Cisplatin. In 1996, researchers found that some cancer cells
developed mutations that enable them to literally pump the drug out of the
cytoplasm, thus allowing the cells to withstand higher and higher doses without
dying, said David Solit, an oncologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer
Center in Boston.
Similarly, as pharmaceutical
companies developed a class of drugs called kinase inhibitors that blocked key
molecules in cell division pathways known to be hyperactive in a variety of
cancers, tumors began to develop mutations that allowed them to divide in the
absence of those molecules. Some cancers, including lung cancer, even evolved
to no longer depend on the division pathway at all, making any type of drug
that targeted that pathway ineffective, Pao said.
Epigenetic changes
In addition to genetic mutations,
researchers are finding that epigenetic changes may also allow cancer cells to
nimbly respond to drugs. Unlike mutations, epigenetic changes can occur more
quickly in response to environmental changes, said Pamela Munster, an
oncologist and hematologist at the University of California, San Francisco.
Last month, Munster and her
colleagues published that epigenetic changes are responsible for the resistance
many breast cancers acquire against the estrogen blocking drug Tamoxifen after
around 18 months of treatment. When the researchers looked at the genetic
profile of the breast cancer cells, they didn’t find any mutations that
correlated with resistance, but found that resistant lines were transcribing a
survival gene called Akt at much higher levels than susceptible cells.
The cancer cells used histone tags, or chemical markers on the chromatin, to
expose the Akt gene and increase its transcription. The higher Akt
signal allowed cancer cells to stay alive even in the presence of the drug by
stimulating growth and proliferation and preventing cell death.
“What we learned is the tumor cells
have a way of tagging the genes with the resistance marker that they can then
pass on to other generations,” Munster said, giving those cells’ progeny an
advantage in the drug-treated environment.
Cancer cells may also take a page
from viruses to switch between resistance and susceptibility, according to a
study published November 9 in the American Journal of Pathology. D.
Stave Kohtz, a molecular biologist at the Mount Sinai School of Medicine in New
York, and his colleagues were studying why ovarian carcinomas sometimes become
resistant to a drug, only to become susceptible again after the drug is no
longer taken. Such a change is unlikely to be caused by genetic mutations,
because those are usually not reversible so quickly, Kohtz said.
Prior studies had shown that nuclear
pores, which help transport nuclear elements to the cytoplasm and vice versa,
could influence gene expression by interacting with chromatin at the periphery
of the nucleus. Specifically, nuclear pores can activate transcription by
shielding DNA from repressors, or hinder transcription because repressor
proteins lurk in the region near the nuclear boundary. Given their influence on
gene expression, Kohtz and his colleagues wondered if nuclear pores might be
altered in different cancer cell types.
Using electron microscopy to
visualize the nuclei of cancer cells resistant to the drug Cisplatin, the
researchers saw that the nuclear pores “didn’t look right,” Kohtz said. They
appeared to be hollow, he said, with a key gatekeeper protein in the center
disassembled—similar to pores affected by viruses that co-opt cellular
transport machinery for its own purposes. When the team knocked out the cores
of nuclear pores in other cancer cells, they found the cells were frozen in an
early stage of cell division. These hibernating cells didn’t grow very much,
but they were also resistant to Cisplatin. Kohtz believes these sleeper cells
can lie in wait, resisting the toxic effects of drug therapy, until some other
signal turns them on.
“In vivo, the idea is that they will
sit at metastatic sites or even in the region of the original tumor until
something wakes them up and makes them start growing again,” Kohtz said.
Alternative splicing
Yet another way cancers can acquire
drug resistance has to do with protein processing. Between 40 to 80 percent of
melanoma patients have a mutated BRAF gene, which turns on cellular growth and
division signaling pathway, Solit said. Last year, drug maker Plexxicon showed
that a compound targeting mutant forms of BRAF, called Vemurafenib,
significantly lengthened lives in melanoma patients with the mutation.
Vemurafenib exploits the fact that
BRAF proteins in healthy cells pair up with other BRAF proteins to form a
multiprotein complex, while the mutated BRAF protein act as a lone
compound. This solitary structure can be hundreds of times more effective
in activating cell division than the normal paired BRAF complexes, said
co-author Roger Lo, a dermatologist at the University of California, Los
Angeles, who studies skin cancer. Vemurafenib targets tumor cells by only
inhibiting the standalone mutant version, while allowing the twinned version in
healthy cells to act unimpaired.
But within 18 months, many patients
develop resistance to Vemurafenib, and their tumors progress. To understand
why, Solit and his colleagues looked at resistant cancer cell lines and found
“some of the resistant cells generate a variant form of BRAF” that is
shorter, he said. But the shorter BRAF protein wasn’t made by a mutation in a
protein coding region of DNA, according to a paper published last Wednesday
(November 23) in Nature. Instead, deletions of exon regions of the gene
led to alternative splicing that generated the shorter version, which can bind
to itself, rendering the protein undetectable by Vemurafenib.
Tackling resistant cancers
While cancer cells use an
intimidating array of tactics to evade drug therapies, researchers are slowly
developing ways to target resistant cells. In human trials, Munster’s team has
found that adding a compound that removes histone tags to the Tamoxifen regimen
can make resistant breast cancers sensitive to the drug once again.
Similarly ongoing Phase II trials are testing the combination of
Vemurafenib and another drug that inhibits a compound in the same the cellular
division pathway in melanoma patients resistant to Vemurafenib. And for
those cancers that have switched between quiescence and active growth, simply
retreating with the same medicine later on can sometimes be effective, Kohtz
said.
While there may be general
principles that apply to cancer resistance, for now, treatment requires a
tailored approach that uses frequent biopsies of tumors to see what genetic and
epigenetic mutations they’ve acquired, Pao said. With more thorough genetic
sequencing, it’s become clear that there’s no single answer, even for a single
patient.
“We’re all looking for the common
theme, so that we can find ways to overcome it,” Pao said. Unfortunately,
“cancers are heterogeneous, not just across individuals, but within
individuals.”
Comments:
Post new comment