1.Targeting Arginine-Dependent Cancers with Arginine-Degrading Enzymes: Opportunities and Challenges.
Melissa M PHILLIPS ; Michael T SHEAFF ; Peter W SZLOSAREK
Cancer Research and Treatment 2013;45(4):251-262
Arginine deprivation is a novel antimetabolite strategy for the treatment of arginine-dependent cancers that exploits differential expression and regulation of key urea cycle enzymes. Several studies have focused on inactivation of argininosuccinate synthetase 1 (ASS1) in a range of malignancies, including melanoma, hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC), mesothelial and urological cancers, sarcomas, and lymphomas. Epigenetic silencing has been identified as a key mechanism for loss of the tumor suppressor role of ASS1 leading to tumoral dependence on exogenous arginine. More recently, dysregulation of argininosuccinate lyase has been documented in a subset of arginine auxotrophic glioblastoma multiforme, HCC and in fumarate hydratase-mutant renal cancers. Clinical trials of several arginine depletors are ongoing, including pegylated arginine deiminase (ADI-PEG20, Polaris Group) and bioengineered forms of human arginase. ADI-PEG20 is furthest along the path of clinical development from combinatorial phase 1 to phase 3 trials and is described in more detail. The challenge will be to identify tumors sensitive to drugs such as ADI-PEG20 and integrate these agents into multimodality drug regimens using imaging and tissue/fluid-based biomarkers as predictors of response. Lastly, resistance pathways to arginine deprivation require further study to optimize arginine-targeted therapies in the oncology clinic.
Arginase
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Arginine
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Argininosuccinate Lyase
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Argininosuccinate Synthase
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Biomarkers
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Carcinoma, Hepatocellular
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Drug Combinations
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Epigenomics
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Glioblastoma
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Humans
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Kidney Neoplasms
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Lymphoma
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Melanoma
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Sarcoma
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Urea
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Urologic Neoplasms