LECTURE 24: ANTICANCER Flashcards
- Cancer is defined by two heritable properties:
i. Cells proliferate without restraint
ii. Cells invade and colonize spaces normally reserved for other cells
Outline the main treatment options for cancer
Surgery
* Removal of tumour tissue
* Difficult to ensure that the whole tumour is removed
* What if the tumour has metastasized?
Radiotherapy
* Generally targeted to tumour area
* Severe side effects
* What if tumour has metastasized?
Chemotherapy
* Treats whole body (including metastases)
* Severe side effects due to low therapeutic index
* Usually used in conjunction with surgery or radiation to
ensure tumour (and metastases) are completely
removed
Immunotherapy
* Stimulates the immune system to fight the cancer, typically by targeting tumour antigens
Outline the major reason for the severe side effects of cancer drug therapies
Cancer cells are host cells, just out of control
* The most obvious difference is that tumour cells divide uncontrollably
* Drug ‘selectivity’ is due to greater accumulation in rapidly dividing cells
* Cells at the centre of a tumour may not be dividing
* Normal cells that divide rapidly (e.g. bone marrow) are hit with adverse effects that can cause significant damage
genotoxic agents are
drugs that affect DNA integrity by directly targeting DNA
3 types of genotoxic agents
- intercalating agents
- alkylating agents
- enzyme inhibitors
Intercalating agents
- These drugs wedge themselves into the spaces between nucleotides in DNA to interfere with transcription, replication and induce mutations
Intercalating agent eg
doxoribucin
Alkylating agents (The OGs)
- These are highly electrophilic compounds that react with nucleophiles in DNA to form strong covalent bonds (particularly N7 of guanine)
- This interferes with DNA replication and transcription, leading to mutations
alkylating agents eg
cyclophosphamide
enzyme inhibitors eg
topoisomerase I and II inhibitors
Anti metabolites
drugs that target enzymes involved in dNA synthesis
- They are structurally similar to metabolites of these enzymes so are mistakenly processed as if they are the metabolites they resemble
- This prevents subsequent steps in DNA synthesis
anti-metabolite eg
DNA polymerase inhibitors
Spindle inhibitors
- Affect microtubule function - cell cannot divide and will die
spindle inhibitors eg
paclitaxel
how do spindle inhibitors works
- Paclitaxel is a spindle inhibitor that specifically targets tubulin to prevent polymerisation
- Cancer cells treated with paclitaxel have disrupted mitotic spindle assembly and chromosome segregation, blocking cell division
- Mitosis cannot progress, meaning there is prolonged activation of the mitotic checkpoint, triggering apoptosis (or causing the cell to revert to G0 phase of cell cycle without dividing)