依托泊苷,拓扑异构酶II与癌症。

E L Baldwin, N Osheroff
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引用次数: 462

摘要

依托泊苷是一种重要的化疗药物,用于治疗多种人类癌症。它已经在临床使用了20多年,并且仍然是世界上最常用的抗癌药物之一。依托泊苷的主要细胞毒靶点是拓扑异构酶II。这种无处不在的酶调节DNA的欠缠绕和过度缠绕,并通过在双螺旋结构中产生短暂的双链断裂来消除基因组中的结和缠结。依托泊苷通过稳定共价酶裂解DNA复合体(称为裂解复合体)来杀死细胞,该复合体是拓扑异构酶II催化循环中的瞬时中间体。在处理过的细胞中,切割复合物的积累导致永久性DNA链断裂的产生,从而触发重组/修复途径、诱变和染色体易位。如果这些破裂淹没了细胞,它们可以启动死亡途径。因此,依托泊苷将拓扑异构酶II从一种必需的酶转化为一种有效的细胞毒素,使基因组片段化。虽然拓扑异构酶II-DNA切割复合物是癌症化疗的重要靶点,但也有证据表明,依托泊苷和其他药物诱导的拓扑异构酶ii介导的DNA链断裂可引发染色体易位,导致特定类型的白血病。考虑到拓扑异构酶II在人类癌症的治疗和启动中的核心作用,进一步了解酶切割和重新加入双螺旋的机制以及依托opo苷和其他抗癌药物改变拓扑异构酶II功能的过程是必要的。
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Etoposide, topoisomerase II and cancer.

Etoposide is an important chemotherapeutic agent that is used to treat a wide spectrum of human cancers. It has been in clinical use for more than two decades and remains one of the most highly prescribed anticancer drugs in the world. The primary cytotoxic target for etoposide is topoisomerase II. This ubiquitous enzyme regulates DNA under- and overwinding, and removes knots and tangles from the genome by generating transient double-stranded breaks in the double helix. Etoposide kills cells by stabilizing a covalent enzyme-cleaved DNA complex (known as the cleavage complex) that is a transient intermediate in the catalytic cycle of topoisomerase II. The accumulation of cleavage complexes in treated cells leads to the generation of permanent DNA strand breaks, which trigger recombination/repair pathways, mutagenesis, and chromosomal translocations. If these breaks overwhelm the cell, they can initiate death pathways. Thus, etoposide converts topoisomerase II from an essential enzyme to a potent cellular toxin that fragments the genome. Although the topoisomerase II-DNA cleavage complex is an important target for cancer chemotherapy, there also is evidence that topoisomerase II-mediated DNA strand breaks induced by etoposide and other agents can trigger chromosomal translocations that lead to specific types of leukemia. Given the central role of topoisomerase II in both the cure and initiation of human cancers, it is imperative to further understand the mechanism by which the enzyme cleaves and rejoins the double helix and the process by which etoposide and other anticancer drugs alter topoisomerase II function.

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