Cancer 2 Flashcards
benign tumour characteristics
Generally self contained and localised
well defined periphery
slow growing
expands outwards from central mass
Malignant tumour characteristics
Not self contained or localised
presence of invading cells at periphery
able to spread
have capacity for rapid growth
what is bad about metastic tumors ?
Hard to treat surgically
impair organ function
chemo resistant
lymph nodes role in cancer metastases
Lymphatic system is a common pathway for the initial spread of solid tumour
pattern of lymph nodes involvement follows natural route of drainage
can also spread through the body wall into abdominal and chest cavities
involvement of lining of cavities results in inflammatory response, accumulation of fluid and inflammatory cells
Oestrogen signalling involving nuclear ER
- Oestrogen diffuses into the cell. E.ligand bunds to the hydrophobic pockets of the nuclear ER
- ER conformational changes -> helix 12 region of ER protein fully seals pockets contianing E.ligand
- Hsp90 “chaperone proteins” are lost and the 2 oestrogen bound receptors dimerise
- Oestrogen bound ER dimees bind directly to the ERE in the DNA promoter of oestrogen sensitive genes driving their expression
- After binding of the dimer to ERE, gene expression is regulated by AF-2 and AF-1
- When oestrogen is blund to the ER, AF-2 reguon recruits co-activators. These bridge the ER to rhe cell transcription machinery -> transcription of ERE containing gene
- AF-1 also recruit co-activators (after Phosphorylation)
8) Both AF-2 and AF-1 activity are reguired for max gene exprssuon whifh promotes proliferation and cell surival -> ER+ cancer growth
What do Non steroidal antioestrogens do ?
Compete with oestrogen for ER binding
Tamoxifen is a trans isomer of the substituted triphenylethylene with a bulky side chain
Reduces growth of early or advanced
How does Tamoxifen have antioestrogenic effects?
Similar structure to oestrogen so competes for ER binding
Binding causes conformational changes, hsp90 loss and receptor dimerisation
Bulky side chain furthers alters conformation and displaced helix 12 so that the pockets can’t fully seal -> results in no recruitment AF-2 coactivators
How does Tamoxifen have oestrogenic effects?
on uterus mainly
AF-1 is still phosphorylated by kinases and recruits its co-activators
Due to persistent AF-1 activity, transcription and proliferation still occur
SERM behaviour depends upon the tissues content (balance of corepressors and coactivators)
Steroidal Antioestrogens
Derivatives of 17-Beta oestradiol with a long unbranched hydrophobic 7 alpha aklylsulphyl side chain
Steroidal (100x affinity v tamoxifen)
Potent competitive inhibitor of oestrogen binding to ER but also gives catastrophic decrease in ER level and activity
Faslodex has no oestrogenic activity
Faslodex MOA
Competes with oestrogen binding at ER
Long side chain causes impaired ER dimerization, decreased nuclear localisation of ER
Also fully prevents helix 12 closure-> blocks co-activators recruitment silencing both AF-2 AND AF-1 activity -> no ER gene proliferation
What are Immune checkpoint inhibitors
Monoclonal antibodies which target the co-inhibitory receptors on T cells or their ligands on tumour cells, to re-engage immune system and restore anti-tumour response
What is CTLA-4 and its role?
Transmembrane glycoprotein receptor unregulated on the surface of active T cells to prevent overstimulation by the TCR
Competes with CD28 to bind to CD80 and CD86 on surface of APC-> prevents T cell activation (not able to kill tumour cells)
Blocking binding with an anti-CTLA-4 antibody enables T cell activation
Explain the PD-1 and PD-L1 interaction
PD-1 is a surface receptor on activated T cell
It regulates effector T cell by inactivation by binding to PD-L1 and PD-L2
tumour cells express PD-L1
Blocking the binding with an anti PD-L1 or anti PD-1 will enable T cell activation
PD-L1 inhibitors do not affect PD-L2 and therefore are more precise and have less side effects
What is LAG-3
Interacts with MHC iii causing inhibition of cytotoxic T cells to prevent autoimmunity and tissue damage
T cells in tumour over-expression LAG-3-> tumour growth favoured
Block LAG-3 favours immune activation
What is TIM-3
Is an inhibitory checkpoint receptor promoting immune tolerance
High TIM-3 levels = poor prognosis
TIM-3 blockade favours activation against cancer cells