Title of article :
Novel Holistic Approaches for Overcoming Therapy Resistance in Pancreatic and Colon Cancers
Author/Authors :
Sarkar, Fazlul H. Wayne State University - School of Medicine, Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute - Departments of Pathology and Oncology, USA
From page :
3
To page :
10
Abstract :
Gastrointestinal (GI) cancers, such as of the colon and pancreas, are highly resistant to both standard and targeted therapeutics. Therapy-resistant and heterogeneous GI cancers harbor highly complex signaling networks (the resistome) that resist apoptotic programming. Commonly used gemcitabine or platinum-based regimens fail to induce meaningful (i.e. disease-reversing) perturbations in the resistome, resulting in high rates of treatment failure. The GI cancer resistance networks are, in part, due to interactions between parallel signaling and aberrantly expressed microRNAs (miRNAs) that collectively promote the development and survival of drug-resistant cancer stem cells with epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition (EMT) characteristics. The lack of understanding of the resistance networks associated with this subpopulation of cells as well as reductionist, single protein-/pathway-targeted approaches have made ‘effective drug design’ a difficult task. We propose that the successful design of novel therapeutic regimens to target drug-resistant GI tumors is only possible if networkbased drug avenues and agents, in particular ‘natural agents’ with no known toxicity, are correctly identified. Natural agents (dietary agents or their synthetic derivatives) can individually alter miRNA profiles, suppress EMT pathways and eliminate cancer stem-like cells that derive from pancreatic cancer and colon cancer, by partially targeting multiple yet meaningful networks within the GI cancer resistome. However, the efficacy of these agents as combinations (e.g. consumed in the diet) against this resistome has never been studied. This short review article provides an overview of the different challenges involved in the understanding of the GI resistome, and how novel computational biology can help in the design of effective therapies to overcome resistance.
Keywords :
Gastrointestinal cancer · Pancreatic cancer · Colon cancer · Network pharmacology · Network medicine · Systems biology · Systems pharmacology · Pleiotropic agents · Drug repurposing · Protein , protein interaction networks · Network , targeted drugs · Nutraceuticals
Journal title :
Medical Principles and Practice
Journal title :
Medical Principles and Practice
Record number :
2575636
Link To Document :
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