Rankin Andrew M, Faller Douglas V, Spanjaard Remco A
Department of Medicine and Cancer Research Center, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts 02118, USA.
Anticancer Drugs. 2008 Apr;19(4):329-38. doi: 10.1097/CAD.0b013e3282f5d4c2.
Telomeres, the specialized structures that comprise the ends of chromosomes, form a closed structure, or t-loop, that is important in preventing genomic instability. Forced modulation of this structure, via overexpression of a dominant-negative form of telomere repeat binding factor 2, a protein critical for maintaining t-loop structure, for example, can result in the activation of DNA-damage responses, and ultimately cellular senescence or apoptosis. This response is also seen in normal somatic cells, where telomeres steadily decrease in length as cellular proliferation occurs owing to inefficient replication of terminal telomeric DNA. When telomere length becomes critically short, t-loop structure is compromised, and the cell undergoes senescence. Telomerase, the enzyme responsible for telomere length maintenance, is overexpressed in a majority of cancers. Its lack of expression in most normal somatic cells makes it an attractive target in designing cancer therapeutics. Compounds currently under development that seek to inhibit hTERT, the reverse transcriptase component of telomerase, include nucleoside analogs and the small molecule BIBR1532. Compounds inhibiting the RNA component of telomerase, hTERC, include peptide nucleic acids, 2-5A antisense oligonucleotides, and N3'-P5' thio-phosphoramidates. Recently, an oligonucleotide sharing sequence homology with terminal telomeric DNA, termed 'T-oligo', has shown cytotoxic effects in multiple cancers in culture and animal models. Independent of telomerase function, T-oligo is thought to mimic the DNA-damage response a cell normally experiences when the telomere t-loop structure becomes dysfunctional. In this review, the molecular mechanisms attributed to telomerase inhibitors and T-oligo, as well as their potential as cancer therapeutics, are discussed.
端粒是构成染色体末端的特殊结构,形成一种封闭结构,即t环,这对于防止基因组不稳定很重要。例如,通过过表达端粒重复结合因子2的显性负性形式来强制调节这种结构,端粒重复结合因子2是维持t环结构的关键蛋白,可导致DNA损伤反应的激活,并最终导致细胞衰老或凋亡。在正常体细胞中也能看到这种反应,由于末端端粒DNA复制效率低下,随着细胞增殖,端粒长度会稳步缩短。当端粒长度变得极短时,t环结构受损,细胞就会进入衰老状态。端粒酶是负责维持端粒长度的酶,在大多数癌症中过度表达。它在大多数正常体细胞中缺乏表达,这使其成为设计癌症治疗药物的一个有吸引力的靶点。目前正在开发的旨在抑制端粒酶逆转录酶成分hTERT的化合物包括核苷类似物和小分子BIBR1532。抑制端粒酶RNA成分hTERC的化合物包括肽核酸、2-5A反义寡核苷酸和N3'-P5'硫代磷酰胺酯。最近,一种与末端端粒DNA具有序列同源性的寡核苷酸,称为“T-寡核苷酸”,已在培养和动物模型中的多种癌症中显示出细胞毒性作用。与端粒酶功能无关,T-寡核苷酸被认为可模拟细胞在端粒t环结构功能失调时通常经历的DNA损伤反应。在这篇综述中,讨论了端粒酶抑制剂和T-寡核苷酸的分子机制,以及它们作为癌症治疗药物的潜力。