Novel Therapeutic Target: the PERKs of Inhibiting the Integrated Stress Response
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Oxygen supports the life of all aerobic organisms and virtually every cell type is capable of sensing decreased tissue oxygenation or hypoxia. Hypoxic microenvironments are known to exist within developing solid tumors as a result of insufficient vascular delivery of oxygen, which can limit the efficient growth and spread of the malignancy. On the other hand, clinical and experimental evidence has demonstrated that reduction in tumor blood flow can diminish the efficacy of standard anticancer therapeutics including radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Indeed, low oxygenation can accelerate malignant progression and metastasis resulting in poorer prognosis irrespective of the chosen treatment regiment. We and others have shown that tumor cells cultured under hypoxic conditions and cells in hypoxic areas of tumors activate a translational control program known as the integrated stress response (ISR). One of the key master switches in the ISR is the dynamically regulated protein kinase known as PERK. Tumors that lack PERK activity are small and compromised in their ability to translate mRNAs involved in angiogenesis and tumor survival. PERK can be activated by a number of distinct endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress as well as hypoxia and promotes a tumor microenvironment that favors the formation of functional microvessels and ultimately tumor growth. We hypothesize that ER stress induced by sub-lethal doses of anti-cancer therapeutics could actually facilitate tumor progression by activation of the ISR. We propose that inhibitors of PERK may synergize with a variety of cancer therapeutics that directly or indirectly induce the ISR.
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