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1.
The Korean Journal of Gastroenterology ; : 68-75, 2009.
Article in Korean | WPRIM | ID: wpr-81626

ABSTRACT

Individualized tailored therapy is a currently pursuing direction for improving the outcome of patients with colorectal cancer. Targeted therapy is the potential strategy to reach this goal by evaluating status of the presumed targets and their related effector molecules and by maximizing the efficacy of chemotherapeutic agents with less toxicity in individual patient. Numerous hurdles should be overcome, however, because therapeutic outcome can be affected by multiple components; tumor characteristics such as somatic mutations at the DNA, RNA, and protein levels; patient characteristics like germline genetic polymorphisms in enzymes linked to drug metabolism; and environmental factors that include diet and physical activity. Currently, large numbers of potential biomarkers have been proposed but have not yet accomplished supporting evidences for their routine usage in clinics. Therefore, clinical trials driven by molecular targets and relevant biomarkers for the understanding of the conflicting data are needed to make markers available in clinical practice.


Subject(s)
Humans , Colorectal Neoplasms/drug therapy , Combined Modality Therapy , CpG Islands/genetics , DNA Topoisomerases, Type I/genetics , ErbB Receptors/genetics , Thymidylate Synthase/genetics , Biomarkers, Tumor/genetics
2.
Medicina (B.Aires) ; 67(6): 747-757, nov.-dic. 2007. ilus, graf
Article in Spanish | LILACS | ID: lil-633501

ABSTRACT

La utilización intensiva de fármacos antiparasitarios es la causa principal de la aparición de microorganismos parásitos multirresistentes en las regiones del planeta donde son precisamente endémicos. Los agentes etiológicos de las denominadas enfermedades tropicales -malaria, criptosporiodiosis, enfermedad del sueño, enfermedad de Chagas o los distintos tipos de leishmaniosis- son protozoos unicelulares sobre los que no se ha desarrollado en la actualidad ninguna vacuna eficaz y cuyo tratamiento se basa en medidas sanitarias preventivas y en el uso de medicamentos. La quimioterapia antiparasitaria actual es cara, no está ausente de efectos adversos y no supone beneficios a las empresas que la comercializan, por lo que la inversión en I & D es marginal comparada con la llevada a cabo para otros procesos patológicos de menor relevancia médica. La identificación de las ADN topoisomerasas como dianas farmacológicas se basa en los excelentes resultados obtenidos en los ensayos clínicos llevados a cabo con los derivados de la camptotecina en la terapia antitumoral. Las importantes diferencias estructurales entre las ADN topoisomerasas de tipo I de tripanosomas y leishmanias con respecto a sus homólogas de mamífero ha abierto un nuevo campo de investigación que combina las técnicas de biología molecular con la cristalización de proteínas para poder diseñar nuevos fármacos dirigidos específicamente a su inhibición. Revisamos aquí las características de estas nuevas dianas farmacológicas, así como los compuestos que en el momento están siendo utilizados para su inhibición en los agentes parasitarios que causan las principales enfermedades tropicales.


The intensive use of antiparasitic drugs is the main cause of the emergence of multiresistant parasite strains on those regions where these parasites are endemic. The aetiological agents of the so-called tropical diseases viz. malaria, cryptosporidiosis, sleeping sickness, Chagas disease or leishmaniasis, among others, are unicellular protozoan parasites with no immune-prophylactic treatment and where the chemotherapeutical treatment is still under controversy. At present, the chemotherapeutic approach to these diseases is expensive, has side or toxic effects and it does not provide economic profits to the Pharmaceuticals which then have no or scarce enthusiasm in R & D investments in this field. The identification of type I DNAtopoisomerases as promising drug targets is based on the excellent results obtained with camptothecin derivatives in anticancer therapy. The recent finding of significant structural differences between human type I DNAtopoisomerase and their counterparts in trypanosomatids has open a new field in drug discovery, the aim is to find structural insights to be targeted by new drugs. This review is an update of DNA-topoisomerases as potential chemotherapeutic targets against the most important protozoan agents of medical interest.


Subject(s)
Animals , Humans , Antineoplastic Agents/pharmacology , Eukaryota/enzymology , Topoisomerase I Inhibitors , Antineoplastic Agents/chemistry , DNA Repair , DNA Topoisomerases, Type I/genetics , DNA Topoisomerases, Type I/metabolism , Drug Design , Eukaryota/genetics , Leishmania/enzymology , Leishmania/genetics , Neoplasms/drug therapy , Protozoan Infections/parasitology , Structure-Activity Relationship , Trypanosoma/enzymology , Trypanosoma/genetics
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