Molecular Challenges in Front-Loading Toxicity Testing of Anticancer Drugs in Drug Discovery

Author(s):  
Dale E. Johnson ◽  
Sucha Sudarsanam
2004 ◽  
Vol 9 (7) ◽  
pp. 557-568 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kenneth A. Giuliano ◽  
Yih-Tai Chen ◽  
D. Lansing Taylor

Deciphering the effects of compounds on molecular events within living cells is becoming an increasingly important component of drug discovery. In a model application of the industrial drug discovery process, the authors profiled a panel of 22 compounds using hierarchical cluster analysis of multiparameter high-content screening measurements from nearly 500,000 cells per microplate. RNAi protein knockdown methodology was used with high-content screening to dissect the effects of 2 anticancer drugs on multiple target activities. Camptothecin activated p53 in A549 lung carcinoma cells pretreated with scrambled siRNA, exhibited concentration-dependent cell cycle blocks, and induced moderate microtubule stabilization. Knockdown of camptothecin-induced p53 protein expression with p53 siRNA inhibited the G1/S blocking activity of the drug and diminished its microtubule-stabilizing activity. Paclitaxel activated p53 protein at low concentrations but exhibited G2/M cell cycle blocking activity at higher concentrations where microtubules were stabilized. In cells treated with p53 siRNA, paclitaxel failed to activate p53 protein, but the knockdown did not have a significant effect on the ability of paclitaxel to stabilize microtubules or induce a G2/M cell cycle block. Thus, this model application of the use of RNAi technology within the context of high-content screening shows the potential to provide massive amounts of combinatorial cell biological information on the temporal and spatial responses that cells mount to treatment by promising therapeutic candidates.


2010 ◽  
Vol 31 (2) ◽  
pp. 93
Author(s):  
Tania C Sorrrell ◽  
Julianne T Djordjevic ◽  
Sharon CA Chen ◽  
Katrina A Jolliffe

Invasive fungal infections often respond poorly to antifungal drugs. The fungal invasin phospholipase B (PLB) and/or its biosynthetic pathway are novel targets for drug development. Compounds with structural similarities to phosphatidylcholine, which is a preferred substrate of cryptococcal PLB1, were purchased or synthesised. For many, there was a correlation between antifungal and anti-PLB activity but not all demonstrated selectivity for fungal compared with mammalian phospholipase, and some were toxic to mammalian cells in culture. The most promising, a bis-pyridinium compound, is undergoing toxicity testing in mice. Miltefosine (MI), a stable phospholipid analogue used in the treatment of leishmaniasis also has broad spectrum fungicidal activity, but inhibition of PLB is not its major mode of action. To improve antifungal potency and reduce toxicity of MI, analogues of this alkyl phospholipid have been synthesised and are under investigation.


Heliyon ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 4 (12) ◽  
pp. e01021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ayumu Asai ◽  
Jun Koseki ◽  
Masamitsu Konno ◽  
Tatsunori Nishimura ◽  
Noriko Gotoh ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 3 (7) ◽  
pp. 438-442 ◽  
Author(s):  
John Double ◽  
Nigel Barrass ◽  
Neal D Barnard ◽  
Vyra Navaratnam

2016 ◽  
Vol 94 (7) ◽  
pp. 687-694 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mária Csöbönyeiová ◽  
Štefan Polák ◽  
L’uboš Danišovič

Unexpected toxicity in areas such as cardiotoxicity, hepatotoxicity, and neurotoxicity is a serious complication of clinical therapy and one of the key causes for failure of promising drug candidates in development. Animal studies have been widely used for toxicology research to provide preclinical security evaluation of various therapeutic agents under development. Species differences in drug penetration of the blood–brain barrier, drug metabolism, and related toxicity contribute to failure of drug trials from animal models to human. The existing system for drug discovery has relied on immortalized cell lines, animal models of human disease, and clinical trials in humans. Moreover, drug candidates that are passed as being safe in the preclinical stage often show toxic effects during the clinical stage. Only around 16% drugs are approved for human use. Research on induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) promises to enhance drug discovery and development by providing simple, reproducible, and economically effective tools for drug toxicity screening under development and, on the other hand, for studying the disease mechanism and pathways. In this review, we provide an overview of basic information about iPSCs, and discuss efforts aimed at the use of iPSC-derived hepatocytes, cardiomyocytes, and neural cells in drug discovery and toxicity testing.


2021 ◽  
Vol 3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Seiichi Ishida

Microphysiological systems (MPS) have been actively developed as a new technology for in vitro toxicity testing platforms in recent years. MPS are culture techniques for the reconstruction of the specific functions of human organs or tissues in a limited space to create miniaturized human test systems. MPS have great promise as next-generation in vitro toxicity assessment systems. Here, I will review the current status of MPS and discuss the requirements that must be met in order for MPS to be implemented in the field of drug discovery, presenting the example of an in vitro cell assay system for drug-induced liver injury, which is the research subject in our laboratory. Projects aimed at the development of MPS were implemented early in Europe and the United States, and the AMED-MPS project was launched in Japan in 2017. The AMED-MPS project involves industry, government, and academia. Researchers in the field of drug discovery in the pharmaceutical industry also participate in the project. Based on the discussions made in the project, I will introduce the requirements that need to be met by liver-MPS as in vitro toxicity test platforms.


2022 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nawale Hajjaji ◽  
Soulaimane Aboulouard ◽  
Tristan Cardon ◽  
Delphine Bertin ◽  
Yves-Marie Robin ◽  
...  

Integrating tumor heterogeneity in the drug discovery process is a key challenge to tackle breast cancer resistance. Identifying protein targets for functionally distinct tumor clones is particularly important to tailor therapy to the heterogeneous tumor subpopulations and achieve clonal theranostics. For this purpose, we performed an unsupervised, label-free, spatially resolved shotgun proteomics guided by MALDI mass spectrometry imaging (MSI) on 124 selected tumor clonal areas from early luminal breast cancers, tumor stroma, and breast cancer metastases. 2868 proteins were identified. The main protein classes found in the clonal proteome dataset were enzymes, cytoskeletal proteins, membrane-traffic, translational or scaffold proteins, or transporters. As a comparison, gene-specific transcriptional regulators, chromatin related proteins or transmembrane signal receptor were more abundant in the TCGA dataset. Moreover, 26 mutated proteins have been identified. Similarly, expanding the search to alternative proteins databases retrieved 126 alternative proteins in the clonal proteome dataset. Most of these alternative proteins were coded mainly from non-coding RNA. To fully understand the molecular information brought by our approach and its relevance to drug target discovery, the clonal proteomic dataset was further compared to the TCGA breast cancer database and two transcriptomic panels, BC360 (nanoString®) and CDx (Foundation One®). We retrieved 139 pathways in the clonal proteome dataset. Only 55% of these pathways were also present in the TCGA dataset, 68% in BC360 and 50% in CDx. Seven of these pathways have been suggested as candidate for drug targeting, 22 have been associated with breast cancer in experimental or clinical reports, the remaining 19 pathways have been understudied in breast cancer. Among the anticancer drugs, 35 drugs matched uniquely with the clonal proteome dataset, with only 7 of them already approved in breast cancer. The number of target and drug interactions with non-anticancer drugs (such as agents targeting the cardiovascular system, metabolism, the musculoskeletal or the nervous systems) was higher in the clonal proteome dataset (540 interactions) compared to TCGA (83 interactions), BC360 (419 interactions), or CDx (172 interactions). Many of the protein targets identified and drugs screened were clinically relevant to breast cancer and are in clinical trials. Thus, we described the non-redundant knowledge brought by this clone-tailored approach compared to TCGA or transcriptomic panels, the targetable proteins identified in the clonal proteome dataset, and the potential of this approach for drug discovery and repurposing through drug interactions with antineoplastic agents and non-anticancer drugs.


2016 ◽  
pp. 1-2
Author(s):  
Hsueh-Wei Chang

Most cancer drugs are effective to kill cancer cells but also harm normal cells. Drugs and natural products with the selective killing effect may be helpful to solve this problem. The side effects of many anticancer drugs are partly derived from its damage to both cancer and normal cells without selection. This problem raises the need of anticancer drug discovery with the selective killing effect.


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