Author:
Smith Elizabeth R.,Li Zheshen,Chen Zhe-Sheng,Xu XiangXi
Abstract
<p class="MsoNormal" style="margin-top: 6pt; line-height: 13pt; text-align: justify;"><span lang="EN-US" style="font-family: arial, helvetica, sans-serif;">The paramount prerequisite for effective anti-cancer drugs is their ability to eradicate malignant cells while sparing non-cancer cells. The divergence in properties between malignant and non-cancer cells often establishes a "therapeutic window," a critical consideration for achieving desirable treatment outcomes. Central to this is the imperative of a cancer drug's "selectivity and specificity." Taxanes, a pivotal class of successful anti-cancer drugs, continue to serve as the linchpin of cancer treatment due to their efficacy across a spectrum of cancer types. Operating as broad-spectrum chemotherapeutic agents, taxanes exert cytotoxic effects on proliferative cancer cells by binding to and stabilizing microtubules, disrupting mitosis, inducing mitotic catastrophe, and resulting in cell death. The distinct proliferative nature of cancer cells, as opposed to less proliferative non-cancer cells, affords taxanes a measure of specificity and selectivity. Nevertheless, sporadic yet recurring evidence suggests that taxanes also operate through non-mitotic mechanisms. Taxanes' binding and stabilization of microtubules lead to micronucleation and subsequent cell death, impacting both mitotic and non-mitotic cells. Recent discoveries indicate that the flexible nuclear envelope of malignant cells renders them sensitive to taxane-mediated micronucleation and cell death during various phases of the cell cycle. Conversely, non-cancerous cells typically exhibit a more robust nuclear envelope, rendering them more tolerant to taxane-induced nuclear envelope fragmentation and subsequent micronucleation and cell death. The expression levels of nuclear envelope structural proteins, particularly Lamin A/C, emerge as indicators of taxane sensitivity. This evolving understanding underscores that nuclear envelope malleability, in conjunction with a high proliferation rate, is a pivotal determinant of taxane specificity and selectivity against malignant cells. These insights necessitate reconsidering oncological strategies to augment taxane efficacy, overcome resistance, and mitigate side effects.</span></p>
Reference76 articles.
1. Runowicz CD, Wiernik PH, Einzig AI, Goldberg GL, Horwitz SB: Taxol in ovarian cancer. Cancer 1993, 71(4 Suppl):1591-1596. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.2820710442
2. Rowinsky EK, Donehower RC: Paclitaxel (taxol). N Engl J Med 1995, 332(15):1004-1014. https://doi.org/10.1056/NEJM199504133321507
3. Holmes FA: Paclitaxel combination therapy in the treatment of metastatic breast cancer: a review. Semin Oncol 1996, 23(5 Suppl 11):46-56.
4. Friedrich M, Diesing D, Villena-Heinsen C, Felberbaum R, Kolberg HC, Diedrich K: Taxanes in the first-line chemotherapy of metastatic breast cancer: review. Eur J Gynaecol Oncol 2004, 25(1):66-70.
5. Hanna N: Current Standards and Clinical Trials in Systemic Therapy for Stage III Lung Cancer: What Is New? Am Soc Clin Oncol Educ Book 2015:e442-447. https://doi.org/10.14694/EdBook_AM.2015.35.e442