Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0344307 (
analgesia
)
28,200
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pancreatic cancer has a poor response to conventional chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Inhibition of
matrix metalloproteinase
activity involved in tumour invasion and metastases is a novel biological approach for cancer treatment. This multicentre phase II clinical trial assessed marimastat, an oral
matrix metalloproteinase
inhibitor, in patients with advanced pancreatic cancer. A total of 113 patients received marimastat for 28 days at 100 mg b.d. (n = 9), 25 mg o.d. (n = 90) or 10 mg b.d. (n = 14). Patients with a response to treatment could continue marimastat beyond 28 days. Of 113 patients, 90 (80%) completed the 28-day study and 83 (73%) continued treatment. The principal side effect was arthralgia in 14 (12%) patients at 28 days and 33 (29%) patients over the whole study. There were 31 patients (27%) who required dose modification. Of 76 patients with evaluable CA19-9 levels, 23 (30%) showed no increase or fall in CA19-9. Of 83 patients with radiologically assessable disease, 41 (49%) had stable disease. The median survival was 245 days for those with a stable or falling CA19-9 level 128 days in those with rising CA19-9. The overall survival was 3.8 months. 5.9 months for stage II, 4.7 months for stage III and 3 months for stage IV disease. Of 90 patients, 46 (51%) had stabilization or reduction in pain, mobility and
analgesia
scores. Further development and clinical evaluation of
matrix metalloproteinase
inhibitors for the treatment of pancreatic cancer is warranted.
...
PMID:A phase II trial of marimastat in advanced pancreatic cancer. 1174 27
Congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP) or congenital
analgesia
is a rare monogenic hereditary condition. This disorder is characterized by the inability to perceive any form of pain. Nonsense mutations in Nav.1.7, the main pain signaling voltage-gated sodium channel, lead to its truncations and, consequently, to the inactivation of the channel functionality. However, a non-truncating homozygously inherited missense mutation in a Bedouin family with CIP (Nav1.7-R907Q) has also been reported. Based on our currently acquired in-depth knowledge of
matrix metalloproteinase
(
MMP
) cleavage preferences, we developed the specialized software that predicts the presence of the
MMP
cleavage sites in the peptide sequences. According to our in silico predictions, the peptide sequence of the exposed extracellular unstructured region linking the S5-S6 transmembrane segments in the DII domain of the human Nav1.7 sodium channel is highly sensitive to MMP-9 proteolysis. Intriguingly, the CIP R907Q mutation overlaps with the predicted MMP-9 cleavage site sequence. Using MMP-9 proteolysis of the wild-type, CIP, and control peptides followed by mass spectrometry of the digests, we demonstrated that the mutant sequence is severalfold more sensitive to MMP-9 proteolysis relative to the wild type. Because of the substantial level of sequence homology among sodium channels, our data also implicate
MMP
proteolysis in regulating the cell surface levels of the Nav1.7, Nav1.6, and Nav1.8 channels, but not Nav1.9. It is likely that the aberrantly accelerated MMP-9 proteolysis during neurogenesis is a biochemical rational for the functional inactivation in Nav1.7 and that the enhanced cleavage of the Nav1.7-R907Q mutant is a cause of CIP in the Bedouin family.
...
PMID:Matrix Metalloproteinase (MMP) Proteolysis of the Extracellular Loop of Voltage-gated Sodium Channels and Potential Alterations in Pain Signaling. 2628 85