Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UNIPROT:P10721 (c-kit)
6,575 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Human leukemias are considered clonal hematological malignancies initiated by chromosomal aberrations or epigenetic alterations occurring at the level of either pluripotent hematopoietic stem cells (HSCs) or early multipotent progenitors (MPPs). Leukemic cells are transformed, immortalized, actively proliferating cells that are still able to differentiate into cells resembling mature blood cells. Future therapies of leukemias require identification of molecular targets involved in hematopoiesis under normal and leukemic conditions and detailed understanding of the interactions between normal hematopoietic and leukemic cells within the bone marrow micro-environment. This review presents the basic aspects of hematopoiesis and highlights multilevel exploitable targets for leukemia therapy. These include HSC niche components, signaling pathways (SCF/c-kit-R, EPO-R-JAK2/STAT, Wnt, Notch, HOX), inducer-receptor interactions, superfine chromatin structure modifications, fused transcription factors, microRNAs and signaling of cell death through the Bcl-2 apoptotic switch (BH3-only proteins). The classes of therapeutics developed or being under development to eradicate human leukemias include novel antimetabolites, DNA hypomethylating agents, histone deacetylation inhibitors (HDACIs), retinoids and other inducers of differentiation, targeted monoclonal antibodies raised against cell surface proteins, pro-apoptotic receptor agonists (PARAs), BH3 peptidomimetics, cell cycle inhibitors, siRNAs and perhaps microRNAs. Some of these agents induce terminal differentiation while others promote cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in leukemia cells. At last but not least, this article describes the mechanisms of removal of damaged/harmful cells from organs since impairment in clearance of such cells can lead to autoimmune disorders by self-antigens.
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PMID:Multilevel targeting of hematopoietic stem cell self-renewal, differentiation and apoptosis for leukemia therapy. 1930 96

Myxoid liposarcoma is a rare form of soft-tissue sarcoma. Although most patients initially respond well to treatment, approximately 21% relapse, highlighting the need for alternative treatments. To identify novel treatment regimens and gain a better understanding of myxoid liposarcoma tumor biology, we screened various candidate and approved targeted therapeutics and chemotherapeutics against myxoid liposarcoma cell lines. Therapeutics that target angiogenesis showed antitumor activity. The small molecule inhibitor axitinib, which targets angiogenesis by inhibiting the VEGFR and PDGFR families and c-Kit, inhibited cell cycle progression and induced apoptosis in vitro, as well as having significant antitumor activity against MLS 1765 myxoid liposarcoma xenografts in mice. Axitinib also displayed synergistic antitumor activity in vitro when combined with the potassium channel ionophore salinomycin or the BH3 mimetic ABT-737. Another angiogenesis-targeting therapeutic, 4EGI-1, which targets the oncoprotein eIF4E, significantly decreased angiogenic ligand expression by myxoid liposarcoma cells and reduced tumor cell growth. To verify this oncogenic addiction to angiogenic pathways, we utilized VEGFR-derived ligand traps and found that autocrine VEGFR signaling was crucial to myxoid liposarcoma cell survival. Overall, these findings suggest that autocrine angiogenic signaling through the VEGFR family is critical to myxoid liposarcoma cell survival and that further study of axitinib as a potential anticancer therapy is warranted.
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PMID:Axitinib Has Antiangiogenic and Antitumorigenic Activity in Myxoid Liposarcoma. 2782 37