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Multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy

It is now well recognized that in the vast majority of tumor types, for the approach of “kinase inhibition” to exhibit a significant effect, whether the data are from an in vitro assay, an animal model or the clinic, requires that multiple complementary kinases be simultaneously inhibited. This comb...

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Autor principal: Dent, Paul
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Landes Bioscience 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3926881/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24025253
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/cbt.26176
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author Dent, Paul
author_facet Dent, Paul
author_sort Dent, Paul
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description It is now well recognized that in the vast majority of tumor types, for the approach of “kinase inhibition” to exhibit a significant effect, whether the data are from an in vitro assay, an animal model or the clinic, requires that multiple complementary kinases be simultaneously inhibited. This combined inhibition is not only kill the tumor cell but also to suppress and kill tumor cells that seek to avoid the initial induction of death processes via compensatory survival signaling mechanisms.(1) Even within the broad brush definition of carcinomas from a particular organ, there are a range of mutations which present that will profoundly or sometimes more subtly change the paradigm for therapeutic intervention using multiple kinase inhibitor combinations. For example, in colorectal cancer the K-RAS oncogene frequently has an activating mutation implying that inhibition of RAF-MEK1/2-ERK1/2 signaling, but not an initiating receptor upstream of K-RAS, could have a therapeutic effect; however, some colon cell lines with the K-RAS mutation are still noted to be sensitive to upstream ERBB1 inhibitors.(2)(,)(3) Also, compensatory feedback survival signaling loops can cause, after inhibition of a mutant active intracellular oncogenic kinase such as B-RAF V600E, a survival activation of growth factor receptors in a tumor cell.(4) The clinical studies in the manuscript by Al-Marrawi et al. describe the rational combination of signaling inhibitors in a colon cancer patient whose tumor cells express a mutant active B-RAF V600E protein that signals into the MEK1/2-ERK1/2 pathway downstream of K-RAS; this is a particularly aggressive form of colon cancer for which few rational therapeutic interventions have been available until recent times.(5)(,)(6)
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spelling pubmed-39268812014-02-26 Multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy Dent, Paul Cancer Biol Ther Commentary It is now well recognized that in the vast majority of tumor types, for the approach of “kinase inhibition” to exhibit a significant effect, whether the data are from an in vitro assay, an animal model or the clinic, requires that multiple complementary kinases be simultaneously inhibited. This combined inhibition is not only kill the tumor cell but also to suppress and kill tumor cells that seek to avoid the initial induction of death processes via compensatory survival signaling mechanisms.(1) Even within the broad brush definition of carcinomas from a particular organ, there are a range of mutations which present that will profoundly or sometimes more subtly change the paradigm for therapeutic intervention using multiple kinase inhibitor combinations. For example, in colorectal cancer the K-RAS oncogene frequently has an activating mutation implying that inhibition of RAF-MEK1/2-ERK1/2 signaling, but not an initiating receptor upstream of K-RAS, could have a therapeutic effect; however, some colon cell lines with the K-RAS mutation are still noted to be sensitive to upstream ERBB1 inhibitors.(2)(,)(3) Also, compensatory feedback survival signaling loops can cause, after inhibition of a mutant active intracellular oncogenic kinase such as B-RAF V600E, a survival activation of growth factor receptors in a tumor cell.(4) The clinical studies in the manuscript by Al-Marrawi et al. describe the rational combination of signaling inhibitors in a colon cancer patient whose tumor cells express a mutant active B-RAF V600E protein that signals into the MEK1/2-ERK1/2 pathway downstream of K-RAS; this is a particularly aggressive form of colon cancer for which few rational therapeutic interventions have been available until recent times.(5)(,)(6) Landes Bioscience 2013-10-01 2013-08-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3926881/ /pubmed/24025253 http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/cbt.26176 Text en Copyright © 2013 Landes Bioscience http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/ This is an open-access article licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 Unported License. The article may be redistributed, reproduced, and reused for non-commercial purposes, provided the original source is properly cited.
spellingShingle Commentary
Dent, Paul
Multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy
title Multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy
title_full Multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy
title_fullStr Multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy
title_full_unstemmed Multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy
title_short Multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy
title_sort multi-kinase modulation for colon cancer therapy
topic Commentary
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3926881/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24025253
http://dx.doi.org/10.4161/cbt.26176
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