Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:3.4.22.60 (caspase-7)
920 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Chemotherapy employing paclitaxel and docetaxel is widely used for treating early-stage breast cancer and metastasis, which is frequently associated with overexpression of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and resistance to apoptosis. ZD6474, a dual tyrosine kinase inhibitor of EGFR and VEGFR, inhibits cell proliferation of solid tumors, including breast. Phase III clinical trials using ZD6474 in non-small cell lung carcinoma when combined with standard chemotherapy appear promising. In order to improve the antineoplastic activity of paclitaxel, we presently investigated the effects of ZD6474 in combination with paclitaxel in EGFR and VEGFR expressing human breast cancer cell lines MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231. ZD6474 synergistically decreased cell viability when used in combination with paclitaxel. ZD6474 inhibited cyclin D1 and cyclin E expression and induced p53 expression when combined with paclitaxel. The combination of ZD6474 with paclitaxel versus either agent alone also more potently down-regulated the antiapoptotic bcl-2 protein, up-regulated pro-apoptotic signaling events involving expression of bax, activation of caspase-3 and caspase-7 proteins, and induced poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase resulting in apoptosis. ZD6474 combined with paclitaxel inhibited anchorage-independent colony formation and invasion of breast cancer cells in vitro as compared to either single agent, indicating a potential involvement of altered expression and reorganization of cytoskeletal proteins in combinatorial treated breast cancer cells. Collectively, our studies indicate that incorporating an anti-EGFR plus VEGFR strategy (ZD6474) with chemotherapy (paclitaxel), where clinical studies of dose-intensive paclitaxel therapy are currently in progress, may be more effective in treating patients with locally advanced or metastatic breast cancer than either approach alone.
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PMID:ZD6474 enhances paclitaxel antiproliferative and apoptotic effects in breast carcinoma cells. 2066 3

Taxanes remain first line chemotherapy in management of metastatic breast cancer and have a key role in epithelial ovarian cancer, with increasingly common use of weekly paclitaxel dosing regimens. However, their clinical utility is limited by the development of chemoresistance. To address this, we modelled in vitro paclitaxel resistance in MCF-7 cells. We show that at clinically relevant drug doses, emerging paclitaxel resistance is associated with profound changes in cell death responses and a switch from apoptosis to autophagy as the principal mechanism of drug-induced cytotoxicity. This was characterised by a complete absence of caspase-mediated apoptotic cell death (using the pan-caspase-inhibitor Z-VAD) in paclitaxel-resistant MCF-7TaxR cells, compared with parent MCF-7 or MDA-MB-231 cell lines on paclitaxel challenge, downregulation of caspase-7, caspase-9 and BCl2-interacting mediator of cell death (BIM) expression. Silencing with small interfering RNA to BIM in MCF-7 parental cells was sufficient to confer paclitaxel resistance, inferring the significance in downregulation of this protein in contributing to the resistant phenotype of the MCF-7TaxR cell line. Conversely, there was an increased autophagic response in the MCF-7TaxR cell line with reduced phospho-mTOR and relative resistance to the mTOR inhibitors rapamycin and RAD001. In conclusion, we show for the first time that paclitaxel resistance is associated with profound changes in cell death response with deletion of multiple apoptotic factors balanced by upregulation of the autophagic pathway and collateral sensitivity to platinum.
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PMID:Paclitaxel resistance is associated with switch from apoptotic to autophagic cell death in MCF-7 breast cancer cells. 2227 87