* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download NOX66 - GENERAL SCIENTIFIC OVERVIEW Oct 2016
Extracellular matrix wikipedia , lookup
Signal transduction wikipedia , lookup
Endomembrane system wikipedia , lookup
Cell encapsulation wikipedia , lookup
Cell culture wikipedia , lookup
Cytokinesis wikipedia , lookup
Cell growth wikipedia , lookup
Cellular differentiation wikipedia , lookup
NOX66 - GENERAL SCIENTIFIC OVERVIEW Oct 2016 The steps in this overview are: 1. How a cancer cell differs from a normal cell 2. How frontline cancer drugs work and the mechanisms that cancer cells employ to become resistant to those drugs 3. How idronoxil works 4. Why NOX66 works. 1. Cancer vs Normal Cells A first step in this story is the need to understand the normal. That is the stepping stone to understanding how idronoxil works on the abnormal. Cells are herd animals. They can’t function in isolation. They respond to millions of signals hitting the cell constantly. These signals are coming from neighbouring cells, from distant cells, and even from themselves (they leave and then come back). The signals are received by receptors on the surface of the cell as the following diagram of the cell membrane shows. The receptors (the coloured ones protruding out of the membrane) have the task of receiving the different messages, interpreting them, sharing information with other receptors with related functions, and then sending a single coordinated message to the cell’s genes. The relevant genes are activated and the cell then responds accordingly. Between the cell surface receptors and the genes is a complex signaling system that acts as an interpreter of the thousands of signals heading towards the nucleus. These thousands of signals are fed into a few central points that act like a telephone switchboard. One of these key switchboards is known as Akt (shown below). Akt is known as a pro-survival checkpoint. Its job is to keep the cell alive. It’s sending messages to the cell’s genes to keep metabolizing, growing, dividing, moving. If a cell needs to die, it first needs to shut down the Akt switchboard. In cancer cells, the Akt switchboard is hyper-active. It has been up-regulated enormously, sending far more than normal rates of signals to the genes to stay alive. As a result, the cancer cell grows and divides faster than normal and migrates and moves more than normal. Instead of behaving like a herd animal, dividing when told and only moving when told, the cancer cell now is a rogue animal, dividing and spreading at will. Among the myriad of pro-survival mechanisms that Akt is responsible for is DNA repair. The DNA in our genes is subject to a barrage of damaging agents on a daily basis – carcinogenic chemicals, environmental carcinogens, carcinogenic viruses, irradiation etc. The cell has a very competent repair mechanism that quickly comes in and repairs the damage. One of the many functions that Akt controls is this DNA repair mechanism. In cancer cells, the hyperactivity of Akt means that the cancer cell’s DNA repair mechanism are working overtime. 2. Akt, cancer and drug-resistance The relevance of a hyper-active Akt switchboard to our story is that frontline cancer therapies (chemotherapy drugs and radiotherapy) work by damaging DNA. The rationale is to inflict more damage on the cancer cell’s DNA than the DNA repair mechanisms are able to repair, in which case the cell at worst will stop dividing, and at best, die. The problem these frontline therapies face is that their DNA-damaging action is not discriminatory…. it is just as capable of damaging DNA in a healthy cell as in a cancer cell. What discrimination there is, is based on the rate of cell division. DNA that is rapidly dividing is more susceptible to damage than DNA that is not actively dividing. In a cancer patient, cancer cells are the most actively dividing, and so are proportionately more with lining of the gut, bone marrow and hair follicles the next most active. That means that the maximum amount of chemotherapy or radiotherapy that can be applied is determined by the damage done to healthy tissues such as the gut and the bone marrow. That is referred to as the Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD). So we have a situation with chemotherapy and radiotherapy where we are trying to inflict as much damage as possible on the DNA of a cell that is fighting back by having ramped up its DNA repair mechanisms to extraordinarily high levels. All the while, also damaging the DNA in healthy cells where the rates of DNA repair are much lower. This means that frontline therapies can never be used at dosages likely to kill all cancer cells. The proportion of cancer cells that can be killed varies between different cancer types and is a function of just how much resistance (DNA repair) there is to start with. Cancers of the pancreas, stomach, brain, gallbladder and liver, for example, have high levels of resistance from the start, due to very active Akt function. At the other end of the spectrum are certain leukaemias and cancers of the breast, ovary and large bowel, where initial response rates can be fairly high. But irrespective of how a tumour responds initially, in virtually every case of aggressive cancer, some cells escape being killed because they have higher levels of resistance, and they return eventually to produce secondary cancers that are even more resistant than the primary cancers. The same principles apply in the case of radiation as they do for chemotherapy. Tackling resistance mechanisms An obvious target in treating cancer is to knock out the resistance mechanisms. If a cancer cell was unable to repair its DNA damage, then current dosages of chemotherapy and radiotherapy should be infinitely more effective, perhaps even curative, by wiping out even the most highly resistant cancer cells that currently are escaping. That means that the current MTD dosages might now become highly effective, with the added prospect of being able to lower chemotherapy and radiotherapy dosages even lower to dosages that would have little or no effect on healthy cells. And that means knocking out Akt. Many have tried, but no-one has yet been successful because Akt in a cancer cell is exactly the same as Akt in a healthy cell. Up till now there has been no way to discriminate between the two cells. And Akt is so essential to life, that a non-selective Akt knock-out drug is just too toxic. 3. Idronoxil and Akt Idronoxil is the first drug that selectively knocks out Akt in cancer cells. It does not target Akt directly…its target is a protein that is upstream of Akt and on which Akt is dependent. And it is a target that is only found in cancer cells and where knocking out that target effectively inhibits Akt function in cancer cells. Probably the best way to understand this story of how idronoxil works is to work progressively back upstream from Akt. This is like a ladder with 5 rungs. Akt is the bottom (5th) rung. The next (4th) rung up is sphingosine-1-phosphate (S1P). S1P regulates Akt function. As the following figure shows, S1P is very much involved in the cancer process, largely (although not exclusively) through Akt. S1P levels are excessively high in most forms of cancer, which in turn is directly responsible for Akt levels also being high in most forms of cancer. S1P is manufactured within the outer membrane of the cell, and that process is the next (3rd) rung up in the ladder. The cell membrane is a fatty structure made up of different types of lipids (fats). The compound sphingomyelin comprises about 20% of these lipids. It is part of the physical structure of the membrane, playing a critical role like all the other fatty components in the membrane in regulating what comes in and leaves the cell. But unlike the other fatty components, sphingomyelin undergoes an important chain of events that is essentially the death – survival master switch of the cell. Sphingomyelin is converted by a series of enzymes to S1P. This is a reversible process that is in a constant state of flux going either way….from sphingosine to S1P and then back again. The process involves the production of two intermediate compounds – ceramide and sphingosine – as the following figure shows. Ceramide is known as a pro-death factor (activating cell death, or apoptosis) and S1P as a pro-survival factor. This master switch then effectively controls the fate of the cell, and survival means maintaining a seesaw tipped towards the production of S1P (in turn activating Akt). But if the seesaw tips in favour of ceramide, then the double-whammy happens of pro-survival activity being withdrawn (no S1P = no Akt) at the same time as increased ceramide levels actively cause the death of the cell. Within this 3rd rung of the ladder, the activity levels of the enzyme, sphingosine kinase, is vital in ensuring that enough S1P is being produced to keep the cell alive. The 2nd rung of the ladder is another activity occurring within this cell membrane known as the proton pump. Protons are the positive sub-atomic particles in hydrogen atoms, and these are responsible for powering many of the cell’s biochemical activities, much like a nuclear reactor. Cells that are active make excess protons, and they need to be eliminated from the cell or else they would be toxic. This elimination takes place via the proton pump, which takes protons (shown as H+) and shuffles them from the inside of the cell to the outside. It turns out that the function of the enzyme, sphingosine kinase, is dependent on a certain low level of protons within the cell membrane. If that level rises, then sphingosine kinase activity shuts down. Which brings us to the top (1st) rung on the ladder. There is a protein that sits on the outer edge of the proton pump and which controls the function of the pump. It is known as External Membrane NADH Oxidase, or ENOX. This is the target of idronoxil. By binding to ENOX, idronoxil stops it working, which means that the proton pump shuts down, which means that protons build up inside the membrane, which means that sphingosine kinase stops working, which means that S1P stops being made, which means that Akt function is blocked, which means that all prosurvival activities shut down, including the ability of the cell to repair damaged DNA, which means that the cell is now sensitized to the poisoning effects of chemotherapy and radiotherapy. So why does idronoxil work when no other Akt-inhibitor has been able to be used. Why does idronoxil not affect healthy cells? The answer is that the ENOX protein on cancer cells is different to the ENOX protein that regulates the proton pump in healthy cells, and idronoxil only binds to cancer cell ENOX. Humans have the means to make two main forms of ENOX known as ENOX1 and ENOX2. They perform the same task (driving the proton pump), but differ in a very tiny way – ENOX2 drives the proton pump slightly faster than does ENOX1. Think of a 6 HP pump versus a 5.5 HP pump, because that is about the degree of difference. But that small difference is important when it comes to how many protons a cell is generating ….. the more being generated, the more active the proton pump needs to be to expel the protons. Protons are acidic, and an abnormal build up of protons within the cell would be lethal. In normal, healthy cells, the standard proton pump is perfectly adequate to handle the normal rate of proton production, which means that proton pumps in healthy cells are driven by ENOX1. But when a cell becomes cancerous, its whole rate of metabolism goes up enormously to meet the demands of a high rate of growth, and ENOX1 is unable to meet this need to expel this higher rate of proton production. Under this stress, it appears that cells switch from ENOX1 to ENOX2 to meet this increased demand. Cancer cells therefore switch from producing ENOX1 to producing ENOX2. In all forms of cancer tested to date (and this is across the entire cancer spectrum), ENOX1 has been replaced by ENOX2. Idronoxil inhibits ENOX2, which is why its anti-cancer effect is across all forms of cancer. And idronoxil only inhibits ENOX2, which is why it has not effect on healthy cells. Idronoxil is not unique in binding to and inhibiting ENOX2. A bio-active component of green tea, epigallocatachin gallate (EGCG), along with capsaicin (from peppers,) also inhibit ENOX2, although at considerably weaker levels. Idronoxil inhibits ENOX2 some 100 times greater than any other compound yet identified. Effect of idronoxil on cancer cells Working down the ladder: ENOX2 inhibited proton pump shuts down build up of protons in the plasma membrane sphingosine kinase inhibited sphingosine-1-phosphate levels fall Akt function blocked DNA repair mechanisms blocked Chemotherapy and radiotherapy DNA lesions not able to be repaired Cell dies The result of this sequence of events is that idronoxil exquisitely sensitizes cancer cells to all common frontline chemotherapies. The drugs shown to be sensitized by idronoxil are: Cisplatin Carboplatin Paclitaxel Doxorubicin Gemcitabine. The cancer cells shown to be sensitized to the above drugs cover all major cancer types. The level of sensitization varies between 1,000 – 100,000. That is, the amount of drug such as carboplatin required to kill cancer cells, can be reduced by up to as much as 100,000x in the presence of idronoxil. 4. NOX66 NOX66 was developed to protect idronoxil from being inactivated by the body. The rationale is that if idronoxil could be protected from that inactivation and allowed to reach the cancer cells intact, then there is no reason why we wouldn’t see in the clinic the sort of exquisite level of sensitization to chemotherapy that is seen in the test-tube. The inactivation process is due to a protective detoxification process in the body known as Phase 2 metabolism. This is not peculiar to idronoxil…it happens to any foreign chemical entering the body that is not soluble in water. Water-insolubility presents a problem for the body because it means that it cannot eliminate the foreign chemical quickly in the urine, something that it wants to do in case the foreign chemical is unsafe. But to get into urine, compounds need to be water-soluble. About 10% of all drugs that humans take are not soluble in water. This includes common drugs such as aspirin, paracetamol and codeine. Idronoxil joins this category. Phase 2 metabolism aims to make these drugs water-soluble, which it does by attaching them to other compounds that are themselves soluble in water, the result being that the combination now is water-soluble. One of the main compounds attached in this way is the sugar, glucuronic acid. This attachment is conducted by enzymes known as transferases. This attachment takes place in 2 main locations in the body. The first location is the lining of the gut, which from an evolutionary point of view is how foreign chemicals traditionally have entered the body. Transferase enzymes are present all the way from the stomach down to the large bowel, ensuring that any water-insoluble compound that is absorbed from the gut is converted into a water-soluble form before it reaches the bloodstream. The second location is the liver, which will filter out of the bloodstream any water-insoluble compound that managed to escape the frontline defense in the lining of the gut. Drugs that are modified in this way by Phase 2 metabolism are inactive. The attached sugar makes them too big to be able to attach to their target. Activation of the drug requires the attached sugar to be removed, and just as an enzyme was required to attach the sugar in the first place, another enzyme is required to remove it. Most cells in the body contain the necessary uncoupling enzymes. This means that the drug with its attached sugar needs to enter its target cell (eg a brain cell in the case of paracetamol), have its attached sugar removed, find its target inside the cell and complete its function. When it is finished doing its job, the drug leaves the cell, is picked up the liver and re-attached to glucuronic acid and then passed out in the urine. In other words, Phase 2 metabolism doesn’t block the ability of drugs like aspirin and paracetamol to work; it simply ensures that they can be eliminated from the body over a matter of several hours rather than staying and continuing to work for days because they can’t be eliminated in the urine. Idronoxil faces two hurdles that drugs like aspirin and paracetamol don’t. The first hurdle is that idronoxil’s target is on the outside of the cell, so that it needs to enter the cell, have its sugar removed, and then exit the cell and locate its target. That is a convolution that virtually all other drugs subjected to Phase 2 metabolism don’t have to deal it. But it is the second hurdle that is the clincher, and this is that cancer cells contain very little enzyme activity for detaching the sugar. This means that once the idronoxil-sugar complex gets inside the cancer cell, very little of it is released, and even when it is released, it needs to complete its journey of exiting the cell before it can work. Most of the drug that entered the cancer cell, however, remains stuck to its sugar and unable to work. NOX66 has been designed to stop idronoxil being subject to Phase 2 metabolism. The drug is formulated in a fatty mixture designed to prevent the transferase enzymes in the lining of the gut and in the liver from attaching a sugar. The result being that the idronoxil theoretically reaches the cancer cell in a form that is highly active, with its attached fatty construct meant to actually assist the drug in accessing the cancer cell.