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Abstract
<p class="first" id="d7715742e383">Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a heterogeneous
disease with poor prognosis
that lacks targeted therapies, especially in patients with chemotherapy-resistant
disease. Since DNA methylation-induced silencing of tumor suppressors is common in
cancer, reversal of promoter DNA hypermethylation by 5-aza-2′-deoxycytidine (decitabine),
an FDA-approved DNA methyltransferase (DNMT) inhibitor, has proven effective in treating
hematological neoplasms. However, its antitumor effect varies in solid tumors, stressing
the importance of identifying biomarkers predictive of therapeutic response. Here,
we focused on the identification of biomarkers to select decitabine-sensitive TNBC
through increasing our understanding of the mechanism of decitabine action. We showed
that protein levels of DNMTs correlated with response to decitabine in patient-derived
xenograft (PDX) organoids originating from chemotherapy-sensitive and -resistant TNBCs,
suggesting DNMT levels as potential biomarkers of response. Furthermore, all 3 methytransferases,
DNMT1, DNMT3A, and DNMT3B, were degraded following low-concentration, long-term decitabine
treatment both in vitro and in vivo. The DNMT proteins could be ubiquitinated by the
E3 ligase, TNF receptor–associated factor 6 (TRAF6), leading to lysosome-dependent
protein degradation. Depletion of TRAF6 blocked decitabine-induced DNMT degradation,
conferring resistance to decitabine. Our study suggests a potential mechanism of regulating
DNMT protein degradation and DNMT levels as response biomarkers for DNMT inhibitors
in TNBCs.
</p>
Drug treatments for patients with high-risk myelodysplastic syndromes provide no survival advantage. In this trial, we aimed to assess the effect of azacitidine on overall survival compared with the three commonest conventional care regimens. In a phase III, international, multicentre, controlled, parallel-group, open-label trial, patients with higher-risk myelodysplastic syndromes were randomly assigned one-to-one to receive azacitidine (75 mg/m(2) per day for 7 days every 28 days) or conventional care (best supportive care, low-dose cytarabine, or intensive chemotherapy as selected by investigators before randomisation). Patients were stratified by French-American-British and international prognostic scoring system classifications; randomisation was done with a block size of four. The primary endpoint was overall survival. Efficacy analyses were by intention to treat for all patients assigned to receive treatment. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov, number NCT00071799. Between Feb 13, 2004, and Aug 7, 2006, 358 patients were randomly assigned to receive azacitidine (n=179) or conventional care regimens (n=179). Four patients in the azacitidine and 14 in the conventional care groups received no study drugs but were included in the intention-to-treat efficacy analysis. After a median follow-up of 21.1 months (IQR 15.1-26.9), median overall survival was 24.5 months (9.9-not reached) for the azacitidine group versus 15.0 months (5.6-24.1) for the conventional care group (hazard ratio 0.58; 95% CI 0.43-0.77; stratified log-rank p=0.0001). At last follow-up, 82 patients in the azacitidine group had died compared with 113 in the conventional care group. At 2 years, on the basis of Kaplan-Meier estimates, 50.8% (95% CI 42.1-58.8) of patients in the azacitidine group were alive compared with 26.2% (18.7-34.3) in the conventional care group (p<0.0001). Peripheral cytopenias were the most common grade 3-4 adverse events for all treatments. Treatment with azacitidine increases overall survival in patients with higher-risk myelodysplastic syndromes relative to conventional care.
The emergence of tissue engineering raises new possibilities for the study of complex physiological and pathophysiological processes in vitro. Many tools are now available to create 3D tissue models in vitro, but the blueprints for what to make have been slower to arrive. We discuss here some of the 'design principles' for recreating the interwoven set of biochemical and mechanical cues in the cellular microenvironment, and the methods for implementing them. We emphasize applications that involve epithelial tissues for which 3D models could explain mechanisms of disease or aid in drug development.
5-Azacytidine was first synthesized almost 40 years ago. It was demonstrated to have a wide range of anti-metabolic activities when tested against cultured cancer cells and to be an effective chemotherapeutic agent for acute myelogenous leukemia. However, because of 5-azacytidine's general toxicity, other nucleoside analogs were favored as therapeutics. The finding that 5-azacytidine was incorporated into DNA and that, when present in DNA, it inhibited DNA methylation, led to widespread use of 5-azacytidine and 5-aza-2'-deoxycytidine (Decitabine) to demonstrate the correlation between loss of methylation in specific gene regions and activation of the associated genes. There is now a revived interest in the use of Decitabine as a therapeutic agent for cancers in which epigenetic silencing of critical regulatory genes has occurred. Here, the current status of our understanding of the mechanism(s) by which 5-azacytosine residues in DNA inhibit DNA methylation is reviewed with an emphasis on the interactions of these residues with bacterial and mammalian DNA (cytosine-C5) methyltransferases. The implications of these mechanistic studies for development of less toxic inhibitors of DNA methylation are discussed.
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