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The Roles of β-Tubulin Mutations and Isotype Expression in Acquired Drug Resistance

The antitumor drug paclitaxel stabilizes microtubules and reduces their dynamicity, promoting mitotic arrest and eventually apoptosis. Upon assembly of the α/β-tubulin heterodimer, GTP becomes bound to both the α and β-tubulin monomers. During microtubule assembly, the GTP bound to β-tubulin is hydr...

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Autores principales: Huzil, J. Torin, Chen, Ke, Kurgan, Lukasz, Tuszynski, Jack A.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Libertas Academica 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2675838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19455242
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author Huzil, J. Torin
Chen, Ke
Kurgan, Lukasz
Tuszynski, Jack A.
author_facet Huzil, J. Torin
Chen, Ke
Kurgan, Lukasz
Tuszynski, Jack A.
author_sort Huzil, J. Torin
collection PubMed
description The antitumor drug paclitaxel stabilizes microtubules and reduces their dynamicity, promoting mitotic arrest and eventually apoptosis. Upon assembly of the α/β-tubulin heterodimer, GTP becomes bound to both the α and β-tubulin monomers. During microtubule assembly, the GTP bound to β-tubulin is hydrolyzed to GDP, eventually reaching steady-state equilibrium between free tubulin dimers and those polymerized into microtubules. Tubulin-binding drugs such as paclitaxel interact with β-tubulin, resulting in the disruption of this equilibrium. In spite of several crystal structures of tubulin, there is little biochemical insight into the mechanism by which anti-tubulin drugs target microtubules and alter their normal behavior. The mechanism of drug action is further complicated, as the description of altered β-tubulin isotype expression and/or mutations in tubulin genes may lead to drug resistance as has been described in the literature. Because of the relationship between β-tubulin isotype expression and mutations within β-tubulin, both leading to resistance, we examined the properties of altered residues within the taxane, colchicine and Vinca binding sites. The amount of data now available, allows us to investigate common patterns that lead to microtubule disruption and may provide a guide to the rational design of novel compounds that can inhibit microtubule dynamics for specific tubulin isotypes or, indeed resistant cell lines. Because of the vast amount of data published to date, we will only provide a broad overview of the mutational results and how these correlate with differences between tubulin isotypes. We also note that clinical studies describe a number of predictive factors for the response to anti-tubulin drugs and attempt to develop an understanding of the features within tubulin that may help explain how they may affect both microtubule assembly and stability.
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spelling pubmed-26758382009-05-19 The Roles of β-Tubulin Mutations and Isotype Expression in Acquired Drug Resistance Huzil, J. Torin Chen, Ke Kurgan, Lukasz Tuszynski, Jack A. Cancer Inform Review The antitumor drug paclitaxel stabilizes microtubules and reduces their dynamicity, promoting mitotic arrest and eventually apoptosis. Upon assembly of the α/β-tubulin heterodimer, GTP becomes bound to both the α and β-tubulin monomers. During microtubule assembly, the GTP bound to β-tubulin is hydrolyzed to GDP, eventually reaching steady-state equilibrium between free tubulin dimers and those polymerized into microtubules. Tubulin-binding drugs such as paclitaxel interact with β-tubulin, resulting in the disruption of this equilibrium. In spite of several crystal structures of tubulin, there is little biochemical insight into the mechanism by which anti-tubulin drugs target microtubules and alter their normal behavior. The mechanism of drug action is further complicated, as the description of altered β-tubulin isotype expression and/or mutations in tubulin genes may lead to drug resistance as has been described in the literature. Because of the relationship between β-tubulin isotype expression and mutations within β-tubulin, both leading to resistance, we examined the properties of altered residues within the taxane, colchicine and Vinca binding sites. The amount of data now available, allows us to investigate common patterns that lead to microtubule disruption and may provide a guide to the rational design of novel compounds that can inhibit microtubule dynamics for specific tubulin isotypes or, indeed resistant cell lines. Because of the vast amount of data published to date, we will only provide a broad overview of the mutational results and how these correlate with differences between tubulin isotypes. We also note that clinical studies describe a number of predictive factors for the response to anti-tubulin drugs and attempt to develop an understanding of the features within tubulin that may help explain how they may affect both microtubule assembly and stability. Libertas Academica 2007-04-27 /pmc/articles/PMC2675838/ /pubmed/19455242 Text en © 2007 The authors. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0 This article is an open-access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/).
spellingShingle Review
Huzil, J. Torin
Chen, Ke
Kurgan, Lukasz
Tuszynski, Jack A.
The Roles of β-Tubulin Mutations and Isotype Expression in Acquired Drug Resistance
title The Roles of β-Tubulin Mutations and Isotype Expression in Acquired Drug Resistance
title_full The Roles of β-Tubulin Mutations and Isotype Expression in Acquired Drug Resistance
title_fullStr The Roles of β-Tubulin Mutations and Isotype Expression in Acquired Drug Resistance
title_full_unstemmed The Roles of β-Tubulin Mutations and Isotype Expression in Acquired Drug Resistance
title_short The Roles of β-Tubulin Mutations and Isotype Expression in Acquired Drug Resistance
title_sort roles of β-tubulin mutations and isotype expression in acquired drug resistance
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2675838/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19455242
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