Henry,
He appears to be against NRF2 activators, because they increase Glutathione.
A number of the things we take (Green Tea, Curcumin, ResveratroL) are
NRF2 Activators.
Doug
> An interesting article that may put a whole new light on things.
>
>
> 18. Enhancing apoptotic killing using pre-existing drugs that
> lower antioxidant levels
>
>
> 21. Metformin selectively targets (kills) mesenchymal cancer stem
> cells
>
>
> 22. Free-radical-destroying antioxidative nutritional supplements
> may have caused more cancers than they have prevented
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> Oxidants, antioxidants and the current incurability of metastatic
> cancers
>
> 1. Jim Watson
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/search?author1=Jim+Watson&sortspec=date&submit=Submit>⇓
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#corresp-1>
>
> +
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#>Author Affiliations
>
> 1.
> Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Cold Spring Harbor, New York, NY
> 11724, USA
>
> 1. e-mail:
ber...@cshl.edu <mailto:
ber...@cshl.edu>
>
> Next Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-1>
>
>
> Abstract
>
> The vast majority of all agents used to directly kill cancer cells
> (ionizing radiation, most chemotherapeutic agents and some targeted
> therapies) work through either directly or indirectly generating
> reactive oxygen species that block key steps in the cell cycle. As
> mesenchymal cancers evolve from their epithelial cell progenitors,
> they almost inevitably possess much-heightened amounts of antioxidants
> that effectively block otherwise highly effective oxidant therapies.
> Also key to better understanding is why and how the anti-diabetic drug
> metformin (the world's most prescribed pharmaceutical product)
> preferentially kills oxidant-deficient mesenchymal p53^− − cells. A
> much faster timetable should be adopted towards developing more new
> drugs effective against p53^− − cancers.
>
> * cancer
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/search?fulltext=cancer&sortspec=date&submit=Submit&andorexactfulltext=phrase>
> * reactive oxygen species
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/search?fulltext=reactive+oxygen+species&sortspec=date&submit=Submit&andorexactfulltext=phrase>
> * metastatic cancer
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/search?fulltext=metastatic+cancer&sortspec=date&submit=Submit&andorexactfulltext=phrase>
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#abstract-1>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-2>
>
> Although the mortality from many cancers, particularly those of
> haematopoietic cells, has been steadily falling, the more important
> statistic may be that so many epithelial cancers (carcinomas) and
> effectively all mesenchymal cancers (sarcomas) remain largely
> incurable. Even though an increasing variety of intelligently
> designed, gene-targeted drugs now are in clinical use, they generally
> only temporarily hold back the fatal ravages of major cancers such as
> those of the lung, colon and breast that have become metastatic and
> gone beyond the reach of the skilled surgeon or radiotherapist. Even
> though we will soon have comprehensive views of how most cancers arise
> and function at the genetic and biochemical level, their ‘curing’
> seems now to many seasoned scientists an even more daunting objective
> than when the ‘War on Cancer’ was started by President Nixon in
> December 1971.
>
> Propelling me then, 40 years ago, to turn the Cold Spring Harbor
> Laboratory into a major site for unravelling the genetic underpinnings
> of cancer was the belief that once the gene-induced molecular pathways
> to cancer became known, medicinal chemists would go on to develop much
> more effective gene-targeted drugs. Unlike most early proponents of
> the ‘War on Cancer’, who thought that DNA-damaging chemotherapeutic
> agents would bring real victories in one to two decades, I thought
> three if not four more decades of focused research would need to pass
> before we would be in a position to go all out for total victory [1
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-1>].
> In fact, only after the 1988–2003 Human Genome Project provided the
> world with the highly accurate sequences for three billion human DNA
> letters has it been possible to begin to approach the true genetic
> complexity of cancer.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-1>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-3>
>
>
> 2. Molecular pathways to cancer as revealed through DNA sequencing
>
> By now we know that mutations in at least several hundred human genes
> (out of a total of 21 000 genes) become serious ‘drivers’ of the
> abnormal cell growth and division process that generates human cancer
> [2
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-2>].
> They do so because they encode the protein components of ‘signal
> transduction pathways’ that enable external signals (growth factors)
> to move from the cell surface receptors to key promoter–enhancer
> regions along the 24 human chromosomes. There they turn up the
> expression of genes needed for cell growth and division as well as the
> evasion of programmed cell death, the latter of which much underlies
> the ever-growing resistance of late-stage aggressive cancer cells to
> radio- and chemotherapeutic therapies. Most importantly, there exist
> multiple molecular pathways that bring about cell growth and
> proliferation, each with their own specific surface receptors,
> cytoplasmic transducers, and promoters and enhancers of gene
> expression [3
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-3>].
>
> Much potential cross talk exists between these pathways, allowing new
> DNA mutations to create new pathways to cancer when pre-existing ones
> are blocked. Already we know that the emergence of resistance to the
> gene /BRAF/-targeted anti-melanoma drug Zelboraf frequently results
> from driver pathway cross talk, as does resistance to the targeted
> drugs Iressa and Tarceva when they are deployed against EGFR-driven
> lung cancers. Given the seemingly almost intrinsic genetic instability
> of many late-stage cancers, we should not be surprised when key old
> timers in cancer genetics doubt being able to truly cure most victims
> of widespread metastatic cancer.
>
> Resistance to gene-targeted anti-cancer drugs also comes about as a
> consequence of the radical changes in underlying patterns of gene
> expression that accompany the epithelial-to-mesenchymal cell
> transitions (EMTs) that cancer cells undergo when their surrounding
> environments become hypoxic [4
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-4>].
> EMTs generate free-floating mesenchymal cells whose flexible shapes
> and still high ATP-generating potential give them the capacity for
> amoeboid cell-like movements that let them metastasize to other body
> locations (brain, liver, lungs). Only when they have so moved do most
> cancers become truly life-threatening.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-2>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-4>
>
>
> 3. Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transitions are a consequence of
> changes in transcriptional regulation
>
> EMTs leave intact the pre-existing order of DNA bases while changing
> the way they are read into RNA transcripts. Underlying transcriptional
> regulation are site-specific DNA-binding proteins, and sometimes
> regulatory RNAs, that recruit to genes the machinery required to read
> those genes. This includes the general transcription machinery and
> also enzymes that modify the histones around which chromosomal DNA is
> wound, and the DNA itself. These enzymes mediate methylation and
> acetylation of histones, as well as remodelling of the nucleosomes in
> various ways, and methylation of DNA bases, changes that can influence
> how a given gene is expressed. Regulation of transcription extends far
> beyond its role in influencing how cancer cells respond to changes in
> their environmental surroundings. This regulation underlies all the
> multiple switches that accompany the transition of fertilized eggs
> into the differentiated cells (lung, kidney, etc.) of mature organisms.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-3>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-5>
>
>
> 4. IL6-like cytokines drive mesenchymal cells to commence cell
> proliferation
>
> Much holding back the creation of effective drugs against mesenchymal
> cancer cells has long been ignorance of the externally driven
> signalling pathways propelling them into stem cell growth and
> subsequent differentiation. Most attention until now has been focused
> on the Wnt signalling pathway that sends β-catenin into the cell
> nucleus to activate the TCF transcription factor for essential roles
> in EMTs as well as stem cell functioning [5
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-5>,6
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-6>].
> An even more important villain may have been virtually staring in our
> faces for almost two decades—one or more of the cytokine mediators of
> inflammation and immunity, in particular, the IL6 interleukin. IL6
> blood serum levels, for example, steadily go up as incurable cancers
> become more life-threatening [7
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-7>,8
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-8>].
> Autocrine loops probably exist where cytokine binding to their
> respective cell surface receptors sets into motion downstream
> gene-activating pathways that not only generate more IL6 molecules but
> give their respective cancer cells an aura of almost true immortality
> by blocking the major pathway to programmed cell death (apoptosis).
> /Pushing by cytokines of otherwise quiescent mesenchymal cancer cells
> to grow and divide probably explains why anti-inflammatory agents such
> as aspirin lead to much less cancer in those human beings who
> regularly take them/[9
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-9>].
>
> Unfortunately, the inherently very large number of proteins whose
> expression goes either up or down as the mesenchymal cancer cells move
> out of quiescent states into the cell cycle makes it still very tricky
> to know, beyond the cytokines, what other driver proteins to focus on
> for drug development. Ideally, we should largely focus first on
> finding inhibitors of cancer cell proliferation as opposed to
> inhibitors of cancer cell growth. Inhibiting, say, the synthesis of
> cellular molecular building blocks will slow down not only the
> metabolism of cancer cells but also that of our body's normally
> functioning cells. By contrast, blocking proteins specifically moving
> through the cell cycle should leave untouched the normal functioning
> of the vast majority of our body's cells and so generate much less
> unwanted side effects.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-4>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-6>
>
>
> 5. The gene transcription activator Myc allows cells to move
> through the cell cycle
>
> Long thought to be a key, if not /the/ key, protein against which to
> develop cell-proliferation-inhibiting drugs is the powerful gene
> transcription activator Myc. First known for its role in driving
> cancers of blood-forming lymphocytes (e.g. Burkitt's lymphoma), Myc
> now also has been found to be a key driver of the rapidly fatal ‘small
> cell’ lung cancers as well as the likely driver of many late-stage
> incurable cancers, including receptor negative and ductal breast
> cancers./Lots of/ /Myc/ /may turn out to be an essential feature of
> much of the truly incurable cancer/. It simultaneously turns up the
> synthesis of the more than 1000 different proteins required to move
> all cells through the cell cycle. Although precisely how this almost
> 400-amino acid long polypeptide works at the molecular level remains
> to be worked out, it seems to play a unique role that cannot be
> handled by any other class of transcription factors. Unlike our first
> hunch that Myc was somehow an on–off specifier of gene activity, it is
> a nonlinear amplifier of expression acting universally on active genes
> except for the immediate early genes that become expressed before
> /Myc/ [10
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-10>,11
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-11>].
> Already many serious efforts have been made to develop drugs that
> block its cell-proliferation-promoting activities. Unfortunately, all
> such direct efforts have so far failed.
>
> Using a dominant negative plasmid that blocks all Myc functions,
> Gerard Evans’ laboratory, first at UCSF and now in Cambridge, UK, has
> used mouse xenograph models of several major human cancers to show
> Myc's indispensable role in moving through the cell cycle [12
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-12>].
> Although mouse stem cells in Myc's absence stop growing and dividing,
> they resume normal functioning when /Myc/ is turned back on. By
> contrast, the turning off of /Myc/ in human cancer cells
> preferentially drives them into programmed cell death (apoptosis) with
> one important exception: pancreatic adenocarcinoma cells do not enter
> into apoptosis, quite possibly explaining why pancreatic cancer is so
> resistant to virtually all cell-killing reagents (G. Evans 2012,
> personal communication).
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-5>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-7>
>
>
> 6. Bromodomain 4 proteins play essential roles in maintaining the
> Myc levels necessary for leukaemic cell growth and division
>
> An unanticipated powerful way for lowering Myc levels in
> haematopoietic cancers has emerged from the discovery that the
> incurable nature of /MLL-AF9/ acute myeloid leukaemia (AML) depends
> upon the presence of the not yet well understood protein bromodomain 4
> (BRD4). When JQ1, developed last year to treat the BRD4-driven rare
> /NUT/ midline carcinoma, was used on human /MLL-AF9/ AML cells, they
> rapidly stopped multiplying and differentiated into macrophages [13
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-13>,14
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-14>].
> At the same time, Myc levels rapidly plunged. Most importantly, JQ1
> does not block the normal macrophage production, suggesting that Myc
> levels in macrophage-forming stem cells do not depend upon BRD4. Their
> formation must depend on a different chromosomal remodeller.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-6>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-8>
>
>
> 7. /Myc/ is turned on through multiple molecular pathways
>
> How /Myc/ is turned on not only in other cancers but also during
> normal human development remains largely to be worked out. Likewise
> not known is how the BRD4 protein at the molecular level helps turn on
> Myc synthesis in MLL-AF9-driven leukaemia. Until JQ1 goes into the
> clinic against leukaemia late this year, we will not moreover know for
> sure whether resistance to JQ1 will compromise its clinical utility.
> Unfortunately, the answer is probably yes because artificially turning
> up /Myc/ by means that bypass /BRD4/ causes JQ1 resistance. Moreover,
> there are already known multiple ways to turn on /Myc/ expression in
> normal cells, each starting by signals binding to specific cell
> surface receptors then moving through one or more layers of signal
> transducers to the nucleus to turn up the transcription of genes
> needed for cell growth and division. Myc synthesis is not only
> downstream of the cytokine Jak–Stat3 signal transduction pathway but
> also downstream of the HER2–RAS–RAF–SHp2–ERK3 pathway that helps drive
> the growth of much, if not most, breast cancer [15
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-15>].
> Whether they in turn feed into BRD protein-dependent gene-activating
> pathways remains for the future to reveal. A multiplicity of
> Myc-inhibiting specific drugs may have to be in our arsenal before we
> can routinely move beyond delaying death from incurable cancers to
> true lifetime long cures.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-7>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-9>
>
>
> 8. Detecting key cancer cell vulnerabilities through RNAi screens
>
> That the BRD4 protein is among the major Achilles' heels of incurable
> AML became known not because of a chance observation but by using a
> powerful new methodology for detecting molecular weaknesses that are
> cancer cell-specific. At its heart has been the deployment over the
> past several years by Greg Hannon at Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory of
> short hairpin RNA molecules (shRNAs) specifically designed to knock
> back the functioning of single human genes [16
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-16>].
> A genome shRNA library containing multiple probes (four to six) for
> each human gene possesses some 100 000 shRNAs. Testing all of them
> extensively against just one type of cancer still poses a formidable,
> logistical challenge likely to require 1- to 2-year long intervals for
> even ‘big science laboratories’.
>
> Much smaller highly focused libraries, however, now can be deployed by
> high-quality, university-level science laboratories provided there
> already exist hints as to what molecular vulnerabilities might be
> found. Forearmed by knowledge that invariably incurable forms of acute
> myeloblastic leukaemia (AML) originate from rearrangements of a key
> gene involved in epigenetic chromosomal remodelling, Chris Vakoc and
> Johannes Zuber at the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory found the
> gene-activating BRD4 as the most pronounced potential molecular
> weakness of an /MLL-AF9/ human AML. They did so by screening libraries
> of only some 1000 probes designed to knockout 234 genes coding for the
> key proteins involved in epigenetic-driven gene expression.
>
> Most recently, Vakoc has found three other major protein players
> (Menin, Ezh1/2 and Eed) that work together with BRD4 to make
> /MLL-AF9/ AML incurable by currently deployed anti-cancer drugs [17
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-17>].
> Drugs inhibiting their respective functioning should also provide
> effective anti-AML agents. /Ezh1/2/ and /Eed/ code for polycomb
> proteins that block specific gene expression, whereas the /Menin/gene,
> like the /BRD4/ gene, activates gene expression. Loss of functional
> Ezh1/2 and Eed blocks the expression of the /CdKn2a/ gene-encoded p16
> and p19 proteins that have widespread cell-cycle-progression-blocking
> roles. The Menin protein's molecular role probably involves its
> already known binding to MLL. Like BRD4, it may have a
> Myc-level-raising role. Finding out how such chromosome remodelling
> dependencies emerge and evolve during tumour progression will directly
> impact the clinical implementation of epigenetic-based anti-cancer
> therapies.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-8>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-10>
>
>
> 9. BRD4 functioning is vital not only for fast-growing leukaemias
> but also for many, if not most, dangerous lymphomas and myelomas
>
> As soon as possible, we must find out in more detail how far the drug
> JQ1's anti-cancer actions extend beyond /MLL-AF9/-specific AMLs.
> Already we know that in mice it stops equally well the more curable,
> non-/MLL/ rearranged strains of AML as well as all forms of acute
> lymphocytic leukaemia (ALL). BRD4's capacity to heighten Myc levels
> thus probably extends over almost all leukaemias. Whether the polycomb
> proteins of ALL, like those of AML, also turn off the
> cell-cycle-inhibiting /CdKn2a/-coded proteins p16 and p19 remains to
> be seen. JQ1 also stops the growth in mice of many fast-growing B-,
> and T-cell lymphomas, suggesting that their untreated BRD4 protein
> maintains their high Myc levels necessary to make them fatal. In
> JQ1-resistant lymphomas (e.g. Jurkat cell), Myc synthesis must be
> turned on by a different route. Cell lines from most human multiple
> myeloma victims also frequently show high sensitivity to JQ1 [18
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-18>].
> There, the twosome cocktail of JQ1 and the now widely deployed
> proteasome inhibitor Velcade reinforce each other's anti-myeloma
> actions. When JQ1 becomes broadly available clinically, hopefully by
> mid-2013, it may considerably lengthen the 3–5 more years of
> additional life provided to most myeloma victims by Velcade
> administration.
>
> JQ1 also significantly slows down the growth of a small but real
> number of cell lines derived from many major solid cancers (e.g.
> prostate and melanoma). BRD4 may have been only called into play late
> as these cancers evolve to become more aggressive. Of more importance
> is JQ1's failure to stop the growth of the vast majority of solid
> tumour cell lines. The heightened Myc levels needed by, say, cancers
> of the prostate and breast may instead be provided by the intervention
> of one or more of the some 35 other BRD proteins or other chromatin
> regulators. Unfortunately, we do not yet know how the vast majority of
> them function beyond the fact that their BRD pockets, by binding to
> the acetyl groups, help turn on, not turn off, gene activation. JQ1's
> unanticipated blocking of sperm functioning most excitingly has led to
> the recent discovery of a testis-specific bromodomain (BRDT) essential
> for chromatin remodelling during spermatogenesis. Occupancy of the
> BRDT acetyl-lysine pocket by JQ1 generates a complete and reversible
> contraceptive effect [19
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-19>].
> Early evidence suggests that BRDT does not promote Myc synthesis.
> There may be out there soon to be found, say, breast-specific or
> prostate-specific /BRD/ gene activators. Most important to learn is
> whether they also do or do not drive Myc synthesis.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-9>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-11>
>
>
> 10. The circadian rhythm regulator (PER2) by negatively regulating
> Myc levels functions as an important tumour suppressor
>
> Myc's paramount role in moving cancer cells through the cell cycle has
> recently been reinforced by two highly independent RNAi screens to
> find genes whose loss of function selectively kills cancer cells [20
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-20>,21
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-21>].
> In sampling largely different sets of genes, they both honed in on the
> gene /CSNKe/ coding for protein kinase casein kinase 2 epsilon. Among
> its many multiple targets for phosphorylation and subsequent
> proteosome-mediated degradation is the transcription factor/PER2/ gene
> whose selective binding to DNA turns off the function of many genes
> including /Myc/. Already long known has been PERIOD 2 (PER2)
> involvement as a clock protein at the heart of the circadian rhythms
> of higher animal cells. Later, quite unexpectedly, PER2 was found to
> function as a tumour suppressor, with the absence of both its copies
> causing the rate of radiation-induced cancers to rise. It now seems
> obvious that its anti-cancer action arises from its ability to turn
> off /Myc/. In PER2's absence, Myc levels greatly rise, thereby
> explaining why tumours of many types all display higher levels of
> CSNKe than found in their normal cell equivalents. Common sense
> suggests that specific CSNKe inhibitors should soon be broadly tested
> against a large variety of human cancers.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-10>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-12>
>
>
> 11. High-Myc-driven, fast proliferating cells possess cell cycle
> vulnerabilities
>
> High-Myc-level proliferating cells less efficiently proceed through
> the mitotic cycle than cells driven by lower Myc levels. Why high Myc
> leads to many more mitotic-generated chromosome abnormalities has
> recently been explained through a large RNAi screen designed to reveal
> ‘synthetic lethal’ genes that only have vital function under
> conditions of high Myc. Most unexpectedly, they pinpointed key roles
> for the SUMO-activating genes /SAE1/ and /SAE2/ involved in
> proteasome-specific protein degradation [22
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-22>].
> When they are blocked from functioning, large numbers of Myc-driven
> genes somehow become switched from on to off. As expected, many
> function in the formation and breakdown of the mitotic spindle. A much
> less anticipated second class functions in ubiquitin-based,
> proteasome-mediated protein degradation. Conceivably, the fast growth
> rates of high-Myc-level-driven proliferating cells generate more
> mitosis-involved proteins than their respective proteasomes can timely
> breakdown. In any case, drugs designed to block /SAE1/ and
> /SAE2/ should preferentially kill fast-proliferating cancer cells.
>
> High-Myc-level vulnerability is also generated by suboptimal supplies
> of CD kinase 1 (CDK1) that functions with the A type cyclins during
> the late S phase of the cell cycle. As long as the Myc levels are
> those of normal cells, proliferating cells have sufficient CDK1. But
> when more Myc leads to faster cell cycles, much more CDK1 is required
> to prevent failed cell divisions. So, it makes a prime candidate for
> the development of an effective drug against high-Myc-driven cancers
> [23
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-23>].
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-11>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-13>
>
>
> 12. Selectively killing cancer cells through exploiting
> cancer-specific metabolic and oxidative weaknesses
>
> We must focus much, much more on the wide range of metabolic and
> oxidative vulnerabilities that arise as consequences of the
> uncontrolled growth and proliferation capacities of cancer cells. As
> human cancers become driven to more aggressive glycolytic states,
> their ever-increasing metabolic stress makes them especially
> vulnerable to sudden lowering of their vital ATP energy supplies.
> 3-Bromopyruvate, the powerful dual inhibitor of hexokinase as well as
> oxidative phosphorylation, kills highly dangerous hepatocellular
> carcinoma cells more than 10 times faster than the more resilient
> normal liver cells and so has the capacity to truly cure, at least in
> rats, an otherwise highly incurable cancer [24
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-24>,25
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-25>].
> The structurally very different hexokinase inhibitor 2-deoxyglucose,
> through its ability to block glycolysis, also has the potential for
> being an important anti-cancer drug. Not surprisingly, it works even
> better when combined with inhibitors of ATP-generating oxidative
> phosphorylation such as the mitochondrial target drug Mito Q [26
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-26>].
>
> A key mediator of cellular response to falling ATP levels is the
> AMP-dependent protein kinase AMPK, which in times of nutritional
> stress phosphorylates key target proteins to push metabolism away from
> anabolic growth patterns [27
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-27>].
> By inhibiting mTOR it slows protein synthesis, and by phosphorylating
> acetyl-CoA carboxylase it slows down lipid synthesis. The glycolytic
> pathways that produce the cellular building blocks are indirectly
> controlled by AMPK through its phosphorylation of the p53
> transcription factor. Activated p53 slows down glycolysis during cell
> cycle arrest through turning on its /TIGAR/ gene target. Its
> respective protein breaks down the key regulator of glycolysis
> fructose 2,6-bisphosphate as well as blocking further cell cycles
> through turning on the /p21/gene.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-12>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-14>
>
>
> 13. Preferential cancer cell killing by apoptosis reflects high
> p53 levels
>
> The enhanced apoptosis capability of early-stage epithelial cancer
> cells, in comparison with their normal cell equivalents, reflects
> their higher content of activated p53 transcription factor.
> Overexpression and amplification of the p53 repressors MDM2 and MDM4
> are common across cancer types. In the case of melanomas, p53 function
> is commonly shut down by overexpression of MDM4. Already a drug exists
> that through its inhibition of MDM4 makes melanoma much more treatable
> [28
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-28>].
> Knowing more about why p53 activation sometimes leads to cell cycle
> arrest (senescence) and under different circumstances results in
> apoptosis remains an important challenge for the immediate future.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-13>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-15>
>
>
> 14. P53 induces apoptosis by turning on the synthesis of genes
> whose primary function is the synthesis of reactive oxygen species
>
> How p53 turns on apoptosis was first revealed through elegant gene
> expression studies carried out in Bert Vogelstein's Johns Hopkins
> laboratory in 1997 [29
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-29>].
> Although looking for genes expressed only during apoptosis, they
> discovered a set of 13 p53-induced genes (/PIG/ genes), each of which
> are likely key players in the cellular synthesis of reactive oxygen
> species (ROS; H_2 O_2 hydrogen peroxide, the OH^− radiation and O_2
> ^− superoxides). /PIG3/, for example, codes for a quinone
> oxidoreductase that is a potent generator of ROS [30
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-30>,31
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-31>].
> p53 target genes also play major roles in downstream processes through
> turning on synthesis of some 10 different mitochondrial functioning
> proteins such as BAX, PUMA and NOXA, as well as death receptors such
> as DR4 and DR5, that in ways yet to be elucidated help carry out the
> many successive proteolysis stages in apoptosis [32
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-32>].
>
> Equally important, p53 turns on the synthesis of the key proteins
> involved in the apoptotic (programmed cell death) elimination of cells
> that have no long-term future, say, through unsustainable metabolic
> stress or damage to cellular chromosomes brought about by exposure to
> ultraviolet or ionizing radiation. So, removing such cells are complex
> sets of largely mitochondrial-sited degradation events. As the
> successive stages in apoptosis unravel, the respective dying cells
> lose mitochondrial functioning and release cytochrome c, culminating
> in DNA-liberating cell dissolution.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-14>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-16>
>
>
> 15. Leakage from drug-impaired mitochondrial electron transport
> chains raises reactive oxygen species levels
>
> The mitochondrial electron transport generation of ATP and heat is
> obligatorily accompanied by the production of ROS (such as the OH^−
> radical, H_2 O_2 and O_2 ^− superoxides). Normally, preventing ROS
> molecules from irreversibly damaging key nucleic acid and protein
> molecules are potent antioxidative molecules such as glutathione and
> thioredoxin [33
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-33>].
> When present in normal amounts, they cannot handle the much larger
> amount of ROS generated when oxidative phosphorylation becomes
> inhibited by mitochondrial-specific drugs such as rotenone that block
> feeding of NADH into the respiratory chain or by 3′-3′
> diindolylmethane (DIM), the active component in the long-reputed
> chemo-preventative /Brassica/ vegetables, which inhibits the
> mitochondrial F1F0 ATP synthesis complex [34
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-34>].
> Still-remaining ROS molecules through oxidizing intra-mitochondrial
> targets induce the apoptotic elimination of cells damaged from
> excessive oxidative stress. Already, DIM is used as an adjuvant
> therapy for recurrent respiratory papillomatosis in humans. The
> molecular mechanism(s) through which ROS induce apoptosis remains to
> be found—hopefully soon. Now, we will be surprised if they do not
> somehow directly oxidize and so activate one or more of the BAX-like
> proteins involved in p53-mediated apoptosis.
>
> That ROS by themselves can mediate apoptosis was recently convincingly
> shown by the finding that the ‘first-in-class’ anti-cancer
> mitochondrial drug elesclomol (discovered by Synta Pharmaceuticals
> through screening for anti-apoptotic agents) kills cancer cells
> through promoting ROS generation [35
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-35>].
> When these resulting ROS molecules are destroyed through the
> simultaneous administration of the antioxidant molecule
> /N/-acetylcysteine, preferential killing of cancer cells stops. The
> failure of elesclomol to generate apoptosis in non-cancerous cells
> probably arises from the inherently lower ROS level generated by
> normal mitochondrial electron transport machinery.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-15>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-17>
>
>
> 16. Reactive oxygen species may directly induce most apoptosis
>
> That elesclomol promotes apoptosis through ROS generation raises the
> question whether much more, if not most, programmed cell death caused
> by anti-cancer therapies is also ROS-induced. Long puzzling has been
> why the highly oxygen sensitive ‘hypoxia-inducible transcription
> factor’ HIF1α is inactivated by both the, until now thought very
> differently acting, ‘microtubule binding’ anti-cancer taxanes such as
> paclitaxel and the anti-cancer DNA intercalating topoisomerases such
> as topotecan or doxorubicin, as well as by frame-shifting mutagens
> such as acriflavine [36
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-36>,37
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-37>].
> All these seemingly unrelated facts finally make sense by postulating
> that not only does ionizing radiation produce apoptosis through ROS
> but also today's most effective anti-cancer chemotherapeutic agents as
> well as the most efficient frame-shifting mutagens induce apoptosis
> through generating the synthesis of ROS [38
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-38>–40
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-40>].
> That the taxane paclitaxel generates ROS through its binding to DNA
> became known from experiments showing that its relative effectiveness
> against cancer cell lines of widely different sensitivity is inversely
> correlated with their respective antioxidant capacity [41
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-41>,42
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-42>].
> A common ROS-mediated way through which almost all anti-cancer agents
> induce apoptosis explains why cancers that become resistant to
> chemotherapeutic control become equally resistant to ionizing
> radiotherapy.
>
> Recent use of a 50 000 member chemical library at MIT's Koch Cancer
> Center to search out molecules that selectively killed
> /K-RAS/-transformed human fibroblasts revealed the piperidine
> derivation lanperisone [43
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-43>].
> ROS generation underlies its cancer cell killing action. Surprisingly,
> this already clinically used muscle relaxant induced non-apoptotic
> cell death in a p53 (++ versus−−) independent manner. When lanperisone
> was applied in the presence of the ROS-destroying antioxidant
> scavenger molecules deferoxamine, butylated hydroxylamine or the
> antioxidant trolox, no activity was observed.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-16>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-18>
>
>
> 17. Blockage of reactive-oxygen-species-driven apoptosis by
> antioxidants
>
> Although we know ROS as a positive force for life through their
> apoptosis-inducing role, for much longer we have feared them for their
> ability to irreversibly damage key proteins and nucleic acid
> molecules. So when not needed, they are constantly being neutralized
> by antioxidative proteins such as glutathione, superoxide dismutase,
> catalase and thioredoxin. Controlling their synthesis as well as that
> of many more minor antioxidants is the Nrf2 transcription factor,
> which probably came into existence soon after life as we know it
> started. Most importantly, at Cancer Research UK in Cambridge, David
> Tuveson's laboratory has recently shown that Nrf2 synthesis is somehow
> upregulated by the cell growth and division-promoting /RAS/, /RAF/ and
> /MYC/oncogenes [44
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-44>].
> Biologically, this makes sense because we want antioxidants present
> when DNA functions to make more of itself.
>
> The fact that cancer cells largely driven by RAS and Myc are among the
> most difficult to treat may thus often be due to their high levels of
> ROS-destroying antioxidants. Whether their high antioxidative level
> totally explains the effective incurability of pancreatic cancer
> remains to be shown. The fact that late-stage cancers frequently have
> multiple copies of /RAS/ and /MYC/ oncogenes strongly hints that their
> general incurability more than occasionally arises from high
> antioxidant levels. Clearly important to learn is what other molecules
> exist that turn on Nrf2 expression. During the yeast life cycle and
> probably that of most organisms, oxidative phosphorylation is clearly
> separated by time from when DNA synthesis occurs. Whether Nrf2 levels
> also go up and down during the cell cycle remains important to be
> known soon.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-17>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-19>
>
>
> 18. Enhancing apoptotic killing using pre-existing drugs that
> lower antioxidant levels
>
> Already there exist experiments with haematopoietic cells in which the
> cancer-cell-killing capacity of the ROS generator arsenic trioxide
> (As_2 O_3 ) has been shown to be inversely correlated with the content
> levels of the major cellular antioxidant glutathione [45
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-45>].
> As_2 O_3 also knocks down the reductive power of thioredoxin
> necessary for several key steps in cellular metabolism. Its capacity
> to inhibit both thioredoxin and glutathione widens its potential for a
> successful deployment against many major cancers beyond
> promyeloblastic leukaemia. Also capable of enhancing the cytotoxic
> effect of As_2 O_3 is ascorbic acid, which, though known for its
> antioxidant role in cells, is converted into its oxidizing form
> dehydroascorbic acid. Unfortunately, up until now, we do not yet have
> clinically effective ways to lower glutathione levels. Lowering its
> level through deployment of the drug buthionine sulphazine that blocks
> its synthesis leads quickly to upregulation of the Nrf2 transcription
> factor that in turn upregulates glutathione synthesis [46
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-46>].
> A more general way to reduce antioxidant levels deploys motexafin
> gadolinium, a member of a class of porphyrin molecules called
> texaphyrins. Through a process called futile redox recycling, it
> transfers hydrogen from antioxidants to produce ROS. Unfortunately,
> clinical trials designed to show its enhancement of chemo- and
> radiotherapies have so far shown only modest life extensions as
> opposed to cures.
>
> Through selecting for compounds that preferentially induce apoptosis
> in cancer cells as opposed to normal cells, the natural product
> piperlongumine from the/Piper longum/ plant was recently revealed as a
> potential anti-cancer drug [47
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-47>].
> Most exciting, it mediates its action through its binding to the
> active sites of several key cellular antioxidants (e.g. glutathione
> /S/ transferase and carbonyl reductase 1) known to participate in
> cellular responses to ROS-induced oxidative stress. That
> piperlongumine failed to raise ROS levels in non-cancerous cells
> probably resulted from their inherently lower levels of these
> antioxidants which, in turn, result from less activation of the Nrf2
> transcription factor.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-18>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-20>
>
>
> 19. Anti-angiogenic drugs work only when used in conjunction with
> reactive oxygen species generators
>
> The non-toxic anti-angiogenesis protein endostatin (discovered and
> promoted in the late 1990s in Judah Folkman's Boston laboratory and
> now resurrected by Yongzhang Luo in Beijing) shows anti-cancer
> activity only when it is used together with conventional
> chemotherapeutic agents. This fact, long puzzling to me, may be due to
> the chemotherapeutic component providing the ROS needed for cancer
> cell killing [48
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-48>].
> By itself, the hypoxia resulting from endostatin action may not be
> sufficient for cancer cell killing. A similar explanation may explain
> why Genentech's avastin also only works when combined with
> chemotherapy. By contrast, the killing of mutant /BRAF/ melanoma cells
> by Zelboraf works very well in the absence of any obvious direct
> source of ROS. Conceivably, the metabolic stress resulting from its
> turning off the RAS–ERK pathways somehow shuts down the Nrf2 pathways,
> letting ROS rise to the level needed to kill the drug-weakened
> melanoma cells.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-19>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-21>
>
>
> 20. Lower reactive oxygen species levels in stem cells reflect
> higher levels of antioxidants
>
> For more than a decade, there has existed too long ignored evidence
> that normal stem cells have lower ROS levels than their differentiated
> progeny. Just a year ago, even more convincing experimentation showed
> that breast cancer stem cells also contain lower ROS levels than those
> found in their cancerous epithelial-like progeny cells [49
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-49>].
> All stem cells, be they normal or cancerous, probably have lower ROS
> levels as a result of their corresponding higher levels of prominent
> antioxidant molecules such as glutathione and thioredoxin. Most
> likely, these heightened amounts have evolved to protect chromosomal
> RNA from ROS-induced damage to the more exposed region of chromosomal
> DNA as it undergoes changes in compaction as it moves through the cell
> cycle. Whether all dividing cells have higher antioxidant levels
> remains to be worked out. If so, all stem cells will be inherently
> much more resistant to ROS-induced apoptotic killing than more
> differentiated, much less antioxidant-rich progeny cells.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-20>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-22>
>
>
> 21. Metformin selectively targets (kills) mesenchymal cancer stem
> cells
>
> Already we have at our disposal a relatively non-toxic, excessively
> well-tested drug that preferentially kills mesenchymal stem cells. In
> a still much unappreciated article published three years ago in
> /Cancer Research/, Kevin Struhl's laboratory at Harvard Medical School
> first showed that metformin, a blocker of stage 2 oxidative
> phosphorylation, selectively targets stem cells. When so applied with
> chemotherapeutic agents to block xenographic tumour growth, it induces
> prolonged remission if not real cures [50
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-50>,51
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-51>].
> But when metformin was left out of these experiments, subsequent
> multiplication of unkillable mesenchymal stem cells lets these
> xenographs grow into life-threatening forms, showing that chemotherapy
> by itself does not kill stem cells. This most widely used
> anti-diabetic drug's heightened ability to kill late-stage mesenchymal
> cancer cells probably explains why those humans who use it regularly
> have reduced incidences of many cancers.
>
> Metformin is presently being added to a number of anti-cancer
> chemotherapeutic regimes to see whether it magnifies their
> effectiveness in humans. The fact that metformin works much more
> effectively against p53*^− − *cells suggests that it may be most
> active against late-stage cancers, the vast majority of whose cells
> have lost both of their /p53/ genes. By contrast, the highly
> chemo-radio-sensitive early-stage cancers against which most of
> anti-cancer drug development has focused might very well show little
> metformin effectiveness. By the end of 2013, we should know whether it
> radically improves any current therapies now in use. Highly focused
> new drug development should be initiated towards finding compounds
> beyond metformin that selectively kill stem cells. And the reason why
> metformin preferentially kills p53*^− − * stem cells should be even
> more actively sought out.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-21>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-23>
>
>
> 22. Free-radical-destroying antioxidative nutritional supplements
> may have caused more cancers than they have prevented
>
> For as long as I have been focused on the understanding and curing of
> cancer (I taught a course on Cancer at Harvard in the autumn of 1959),
> well-intentioned individuals have been consuming antioxidative
> nutritional supplements as cancer preventatives if not actual
> therapies. The past, most prominent scientific proponent of their
> value was the great Caltech chemist, Linus Pauling, who near the end
> of his illustrious career wrote a book with Ewan Cameron in
> 1979,/Cancer and Vitamin C/, about vitamin C's great potential as an
> anti-cancer agent [52
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-52>].
> At the time of his death from prostate cancer in 1994, at the age of
> 93, Linus was taking 12 g of vitamin C every day. In light of the
> recent data strongly hinting that much of late-stage cancer's
> untreatability may arise from its possession of too many
> antioxidants,the time has come to seriously ask whether antioxidant
> use much more likely causes than prevents cancer.
>
> All in all, the by now vast number of nutritional intervention trials
> using the antioxidants β-carotene, vitamin A, vitamin C, vitamin E and
> selenium have shown no obvious effectiveness in preventing
> gastrointestinal cancer nor in lengthening mortality [53
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-53>].
> In fact, they seem to slightly shorten the lives of those who take
> them. Future data may, in fact, show that antioxidant use,
> particularly that of vitamin E, leads to a small number of cancers
> that would not have come into existence but for antioxidant
> supplementation. Blueberries best be eaten because they taste good,
> not because their consumption will lead to less cancer.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-22>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-24>
>
>
> 23. A much faster timetable for developing anti-metastatic drugs
>
> The world of Physics already knew 20 years ago that it had no choice
> but to go very big for the Higgs boson. To the civilized world's great
> relief, they now finally have it. Biology and Medicine must likewise
> now again aim big—as when we first promised the world in 1988 that the
> still to be found human genome would later prove indispensable for the
> curing of most cancers and so went for it big. If, however, we
> continue to move forward at today's never frantic, largely five-day
> working week, the never receding 10–20 year away final victory that
> our cancer world now feels safe to project will continue to sink the
> stomachs of informed cancer victims and their families. That we now
> have no General of influence, much less power, say an Eisenhower or
> even better a Patton, leading our country's War on Cancer says
> everything. Needed soon is a leader that has our cancer drug
> development world working every day and all through the night.
>
> The now much-touted genome-based personal cancer therapies may turn
> out to be much less important tools for future medicine than the
> newspapers of today lead us to hope [54
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-54>].
> Sending more government cancer monies towards innovative,
> anti-metastatic drug development to appropriate high-quality academic
> institutions would better use National Cancer Institute's (NCI) monies
> than the large sums spent now testing drugs for which we have little
> hope of true breakthroughs. The biggest obstacle today to moving
> forward effectively towards a true /war against cancer/ may, in fact,
> come from the inherently conservative nature of today's cancer
> research establishments. They still are too closely wedded to moving
> forward with cocktails of drugs targeted against the growth promoting
> molecules (such as HER2, RAS, RAF, MEK, ERK, PI3K, AKT and mTOR) of
> signal transduction pathways instead of against Myc molecules that
> specifically promote the cell cycle.
>
> Most needed now are many new anti-Myc drugs beyond the exciting new
> BRD4 inhibitors, such as JQ1, as well as multiple drugs that inhibit
> the antioxidative molecules that likely make, say, pancreatic cancer
> so incurable. They should much enhance the effectiveness of all
> current radio- and chemotherapeutic regimes. As such, they will likely
> cure many more now incurable cancers. How they will interact as
> cocktail partners with the newer targeted therapies that do not
> directly generate ROS remains to be seen. Equally important may be an
> expanded search for drugs that prevent p53 breakdown.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-23>Next
> Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-list-1>
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-55>].
> The Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory happily has the means to move
> forward almost as if it were in a true war.
>
> Further financial backing, allowing many more cancer-focused academic
> institutions to also go big using RNAi-based target discovery as well
> as to let them go on to the early stages of subsequent drug discovery,
> is not beyond the might of the world's major government research
> funding bodies nor that of our world's many, many super billionaires.
> The main factor holding us back from overcoming most of metastatic
> cancer over the next decade may soon no longer be lack of knowledge
> but our world's increasing failure to intelligently direct its
> ‘monetary might’ towards more human-society-benefiting directions.
>
> * Received October 4, 2012.
> * Accepted December 3, 2012.
>
> *
>
>
> © 2013 The Authors. Published by the Royal Society under the terms of
> the Creative Commons Attribution
> Licensehttp://
creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/, which permits
> unrestricted use, provided the original author and source are credited.
>
> Graphic
>
> *Jim Watson's* (JDW's) interest in cancer first publicly expressed
> itself through his teaching on tumour viruses after he joined the
> Harvard University Biology Department in the fall of 1956. Later, for
> the new Introductory Biology II, his last of 10 lectures focused on
> how cancer might be induced by DNA tumour viruses, the smallest of
> which probably only had DNA sufficient to code for 3–5 proteins. In
> his 1965 textbook, /The Molecular Biology of the Gene/, the last
> chapter (‘A geneticist's view of cancer’) raised the question of how a
> virus might have the capacity to turn on the cell cycle. Upon becoming
> director of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory in 1968, he changed its
> major research emphasis from microbial genetics to cancer (through
> recruiting Joe Sambrook from Renato Dulbecco's lab at the Salk
> Institute). Major among its early Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
> eukaryotic accomplishments was the 1977 co-discovery of RNA splicing
> by Richard Roberts and Phil Sharp (MIT). JDW then necessarily devoted
> much of his time on scientific politics, first toward gaining National
> Institutes of Health (NIH) acceptance of the safety of recombinant DNA
> procedures (1973–1978), and second arguing for and then leading NIH's
> role in the Human Genome Project (1986–1992). In 2008, JDW's main
> interest moved to the curing of cancer focusing on the biochemistry of
> cancer cells as opposed to their genetic origins.
>
> Previous Section
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-24>
>
>
> References
>
> 1. ↵
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> 1. Top
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#content-block>
> 2. Abstract
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#abstract-1>
> 3. 2. Molecular pathways to cancer as revealed through DNA sequencing
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-2>
> 4. 3. Epithelial-to-mesenchymal transitions are a consequence of
> changes in transcriptional regulation
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-3>
> 5. 4. IL6-like cytokines drive mesenchymal cells to commence cell
> proliferation
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-4>
> 6. 5. The gene transcription activator Myc allows cells to move
> through the cell cycle
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-5>
> 7. 6. Bromodomain 4 proteins play essential roles in maintaining the
> Myc levels necessary for leukaemic cell growth and division
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-6>
> 8. 7. /Myc/ is turned on through multiple molecular pathways
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-7>
> 9. 8. Detecting key cancer cell vulnerabilities through RNAi screens
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-8>
> 10. 9. BRD4 functioning is vital not only for fast-growing leukaemias
> but also for many, if not most, dangerous lymphomas and myelomas
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-9>
> 11. 10. The circadian rhythm regulator (PER2) by negatively regulating
> Myc levels functions as an important tumour suppressor
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-10>
> 12. 11. High-Myc-driven, fast proliferating cells possess cell cycle
> vulnerabilities
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-11>
> 13. 12. Selectively killing cancer cells through exploiting
> cancer-specific metabolic and oxidative weaknesses
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-12>
> 14. 13. Preferential cancer cell killing by apoptosis reflects high
> p53 levels
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-13>
> 15. 14. P53 induces apoptosis by turning on the synthesis of genes
> whose primary function is the synthesis of reactive oxygen species
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-14>
> 16. 15. Leakage from drug-impaired mitochondrial electron transport
> chains raises reactive oxygen species levels
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-15>
> 17. 16. Reactive oxygen species may directly induce most apoptosis
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-16>
> 18. 17. Blockage of reactive-oxygen-species-driven apoptosis by
> antioxidants
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-17>
> 19. 18. Enhancing apoptotic killing using pre-existing drugs that
> lower antioxidant levels
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-18>
> 20. 19. Anti-angiogenic drugs work only when used in conjunction with
> reactive oxygen species generators
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-19>
> 21. 20. Lower reactive oxygen species levels in stem cells reflect
> higher levels of antioxidants
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-20>
> 22. 21. Metformin selectively targets (kills) mesenchymal cancer stem
> cells
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-21>
> 23. 22. Free-radical-destroying antioxidative nutritional supplements
> may have caused more cancers than they have prevented
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-22>
> 24. 23. A much faster timetable for developing anti-metastatic drugs
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-23>
> 25. 24. A billion dollars should suffice to identify all the remaining
> proteins needed for curing most metastatic cancer
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#sec-24>
> 26. References
> <
http://rsob.royalsocietypublishing.org/content/3/1/120144.full#ref-list-1>
>
>
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