Targeting tumour hypoxia to prevent cancer metastasis:from biology, biosensing and technology to drug development : the METOXIA consortium

Autor: James Meehan, Gerhard Jobst, Jan Alsner, Agnes Görlach, Andreas Weltin, Hilda Mujcic, Hubert Flamm, Maria J. Calzada, Anne Hansen Ree, Jochen Kieninger, Philippe Lambin, Jacques Pouysségur, Brad Wouters, Simon P. Langdon, Carol Ward, Luis del Peso, Peter Ebbesen, Silvia Pastorekova, Ludwig Dubois, Yihai Cao, Gerald Urban, Dean C. Singleton, Manuel O. Landázuri, Heidi Lyng, Morten Busk, Margaret Ashcroft, Ian Kunkler, Roben G. Gieling, Kasper M.A. Rouschop, Claudiu T. Supuran, Dan Cojocari, Kasper Toustrup, Johanna Chiche, Marianne Koritzinsky, Scott K. Parks, Erik O. Pettersen, Kjersti Flatmark, Nathalie M. Mazure, Isabella Moser, Ibtissam Marchiq, Adrian L. Harris, Francesca M. Buffa, Jens Overgaard, Kaye J. Williams, Afshan Ahmed, Syed Haider, Andrea Scozzafava
Přispěvatelé: Radiotherapie, Promovendi ODB, RS: GROW - Oncology, RS: GROW - R3 - Innovative Cancer Diagnostics & Therapy, RS: GROW - R2 - Basic and Translational Cancer Biology
Jazyk: angličtina
Rok vydání: 2015
Předmět:
carbonic anhydrase inhibitors
Pathology
medicine.medical_specialty
medicine.medical_treatment
Population
Biology
targets for new treatment
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH
HEALTH RESEARCH
COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
BIOINFORMATICS
GENOMICS
BIOREDUCTIVE COMPOUNDS
CANCER-TREATMENT RESISTANCE
CARBONIC ANHYDRASE INHIBITORS
DUAL-ACTIVITY COMPOUNDS
NON-INVASIVE OXYGEN DETECTION
TARGETS FOR NEW TREATMENT

Structure-Activity Relationship
Neoplasms
Drug Discovery
medicine
Animals
Humans
Neoplasm Metastasis
education
HEALTH RESEARCH
Pharmacology
non-invasive oxygen detection
Chemotherapy
education.field_of_study
Dose-Response Relationship
Drug

Molecular Structure
BIOINFORMATICS
General Medicine
BIOMEDICAL RESEARCH
cancer-treatment resistance
Hypoxia (medical)
Cell Hypoxia
dual-activity compounds
In vitro
Radiation therapy
Bioreductive compounds
Drug development
Cancer cell
Unfolded protein response
Cancer research
medicine.symptom
GENOMICS
COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY
Zdroj: Pettersen, E O, Ebbesen, P, Gieling, R G, Williams, K J, Dubois, L, Lambin, P, Ward, C, Meehan, J, Kunkler, I H, Langdon, S P, Ree, A H, Flatmark, K, Lyng, H, Calzada, M J, del Peso, L, Landazuri, M O, Görlach, A, Flamm, H, Kieninger, J, Urban, G, Weltin, A, Singleton, D C, Haider, S, Buffa, F M, Harris, A L, Scozzafava, A, Supuran, C T, Moser, I, Jobst, G, Busk, M, Toustrup, K, Overgaard, J, Alsner, J, Pouyssegur, J, Chiche, J, Mazure, N, Marchiq, I, Parks, S, Ahmed, A, Ashcroft, M, Pastorekova, S, Cao, Y, Rouschop, K M, Wouters, B G, Koritzinsky, M, Mujcic, H & Cojocari, D 2015, ' Targeting tumour hypoxia to prevent cancer metastasis : from biology, biosensing and technology to drug development : the METOXIA consortium ', Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, vol. 30, no. 5, pp. 689-721 . https://doi.org/10.3109/14756366.2014.966704
Pettersen, E O, Ebbesen, P, Gieling, R G, Williams, K J, Dubois, L, Lambin, P, Ward, C, Meehan, J, Kunkler, I H, Langdon, S P, Ree, A H, Flatmark, K, Lyng, H, Calzada, M J, Peso, L D, Landazuri, M O, Görlach, A, Flamm, H, Kieninger, J, Urban, G, Weltin, A, Singleton, D C, Haider, S, Buffa, F M, Harris, A L, Scozzafava, A, Supuran, C T, Moser, I, Jobst, G, Busk, M, Toustrup, K, Overgaard, J, Alsner, J, Pouyssegur, J, Chiche, J, Mazure, N, Marchiq, I, Parks, S, Ahmed, A, Ashcroft, M, Pastorekova, S, Cao, Y, Rouschop, K M, Wouters, B G, Koritzinsky, M, Mujcic, H & Cojocari, D 2015, ' Targeting tumour hypoxia to prevent cancer metastasis. From biology, biosensing and technology to drug development: the METOXIA consortium ', Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, pp. 689-721 . https://doi.org/10.3109/14756366.2014.966704
Journal of Enzyme Inhibition and Medicinal Chemistry, 30(5), 689-721. Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group
ISSN: 1475-6366
DOI: 10.3109/14756366.2014.966704
Popis: The hypoxic areas of solid cancers represent a negative prognostic factor irrespective of which treatment modality is chosen for the patient. Still, after almost 80 years of focus on the problems created by hypoxia in solid tumours, we still largely lack methods to deal efficiently with these treatment-resistant cells. The consequences of this lack may be serious for many patients: Not only is there a negative correlation between the hypoxic fraction in tumours and the outcome of radiotherapy as well as many types of chemotherapy, a correlation has been shown between the hypoxic fraction in tumours and cancer metastasis. Thus, on a fundamental basis the great variety of problems related to hypoxia in cancer treatment has to do with the broad range of functions oxygen (and lack of oxygen) have in cells and tissues. Therefore, activation-deactivation of oxygen-regulated cascades related to metabolism or external signalling are important areas for the identification of mechanisms as potential targets for hypoxia-specific treatment. Also the chemistry related to reactive oxygen radicals (ROS) and the biological handling of ROS are part of the problem complex. The problem is further complicated by the great variety in oxygen concentrations found in tissues. For tumour hypoxia to be used as a marker for individualisation of treatment there is a need for non-invasive methods to measure oxygen routinely in patient tumours. A large-scale collaborative EU-financed project 2009-2014 denoted METOXIA has studied all the mentioned aspects of hypoxia with the aim of selecting potential targets for new hypoxia-specific therapy and develop the first stage of tests for this therapy. A new non-invasive PET-imaging method based on the 2-nitroimidazole [(18)F]-HX4 was found to be promising in a clinical trial on NSCLC patients. New preclinical models for testing of the metastatic potential of cells were developed, both in vitro (2D as well as 3D models) and in mice (orthotopic grafting). Low density quantitative real-time polymerase chain reaction (qPCR)-based assays were developed measuring multiple hypoxia-responsive markers in parallel to identify tumour hypoxia-related patterns of gene expression. As possible targets for new therapy two main regulatory cascades were prioritised: The hypoxia-inducible-factor (HIF)-regulated cascades operating at moderate to weak hypoxia (
Databáze: OpenAIRE