Micallef Isaac, Fenech Kimberly, Baron Byron
Centre for Molecular Medicine and Biobanking, University of Malta, Msida, Malta.
Department of Tumor Genetics and Biology, Graduate School of Medical Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences, Kumamoto University, Kumamoto, Japan.
Front Mol Biosci. 2024 Dec 5;11:1455415. doi: 10.3389/fmolb.2024.1455415. eCollection 2024.
Cancer treatments have continued to improve tremendously over the past decade, but therapy resistance is still a common, major factor encountered by patients diagnosed with cancer. Chemoresistance arises due to various circumstances and among these causes, increasing evidence has shown that enzymes referred to as protein methyltransferases (PMTs) play a significant role in the development of chemoresistance in various cancers. These enzymes are responsible for the methylation of different amino acids, particularly lysine and arginine, via protein lysine methyltransferases (PKMTs) and protein arginine methyltransferases (PRMTs), respectively. Various PMTs have been identified to be dysregulated in the development of cancer and chemoresistance. Nonetheless, the functional role of these PMTs in the development of chemoresistance is poorly characterised. This advocates the need for innovative approaches and technologies suitable for better characterisation of these PMTs and their potential clinical inhibitors. In the case of a handful of PMTs, inhibitory small molecules which can function as anticancer drugs have been developed and have also entered clinical trials. Considering all this, PMTs have become a promising and valuable target in cancer chemoresistance related research. This review will give a small introduction on the different PKMTs and PRMTs families which are dysregulated in different cancers and the known proteins targeted by the respective enzymes. The focus will then shift towards PMTs known to be involved in chemoresistance development and the inhibitors developed against these, together with their mode of action. Lastly, the current obstacles and future perspectives of PMT inhibitors in cancer chemoresistance will be discussed.
在过去十年中,癌症治疗取得了巨大进步,但治疗耐药性仍是癌症患者普遍面临的主要问题。化疗耐药性的产生是由多种情况导致的,在这些原因中,越来越多的证据表明,被称为蛋白质甲基转移酶(PMTs)的酶在多种癌症的化疗耐药性发展中起着重要作用。这些酶分别通过蛋白质赖氨酸甲基转移酶(PKMTs)和蛋白质精氨酸甲基转移酶(PRMTs)负责不同氨基酸(特别是赖氨酸和精氨酸)的甲基化。已发现多种PMTs在癌症和化疗耐药性的发展过程中表达失调。然而,这些PMTs在化疗耐药性发展中的功能作用仍未得到充分表征。这就需要采用创新方法和技术,以更好地表征这些PMTs及其潜在的临床抑制剂。对于少数几种PMTs,已经开发出了可作为抗癌药物的抑制性小分子,并且这些小分子也已进入临床试验阶段。考虑到所有这些因素,PMTs已成为癌症化疗耐药性相关研究中一个有前景且有价值的靶点。本综述将简要介绍在不同癌症中表达失调的不同PKMTs和PRMTs家族,以及各自酶所靶向的已知蛋白质。然后重点将转向已知参与化疗耐药性发展的PMTs以及针对它们开发的抑制剂,以及它们的作用方式。最后,将讨论PMT抑制剂在癌症化疗耐药性方面当前面临的障碍和未来前景。