Back to Search Start Over

Evolution of tumour cells during AsiDNA treatment results in energy exhaustion, decrease of responsiveness to signal and higher sensitivity to the drug

Authors :
Pierre-Marie Girard
Frédéric Thomas
Marie Dutreix
Sofia Ferreira
Wael Jdey
Sergey Alekseev
Srividya Bhaskara
Nathalie Berthault
Maria Kozlac
Institut Curie [Paris]
Huntsman Cancer Institute [Salt Lake City]
University of Utah
Maladies infectieuses et vecteurs : écologie, génétique, évolution et contrôle (MIVEGEC)
Université de Montpellier (UM)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)-Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD [France-Sud])
European Project: 642623,H2020,H2020-MSCA-ITN-2014,RADIATE(2015)
Source :
Evolutionary Applications, Evolutionary Applications, 2020, ⟨10.1111/eva.12949⟩, Evolutionary Applications, Blackwell, 2020, ⟨10.1111/eva.12949⟩, Evolutionary Applications, Vol 13, Iss 7, Pp 1673-1680 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
HAL CCSD, 2020.

Abstract

International audience; It is increasingly suggested that ecological and evolutionary sciences could inspire novel therapies against cancer but medical evidence of this remains scarce at the moment. The Achilles heel of conventional and targeted anticancer treatments is intrinsic or acquired resistance following Darwinian selection, i.e. treatment toxicity places the surviving cells under intense evolutionary selective pressure to develop resistance. Here, we review a set of data that demonstrate that Darwinian principles derived from the “smoke detector” principle can instead drive the evolution of malignant cells toward a different trajectory. Specifically, long term exposure of cancer cells to a strong alarm signal, generated by the DNA repair inhibitor AsiDNA, induces a stable new state characterized by a down‐regulation of the targeted pathways and does not generate resistant clones. This property is due to the original mechanism of action of AsiDNA, which acts by over‐activating a “false” signaling of DNA damage through DNA‐PK and PARP enzymes, and is not observed with classical DNA repair inhibitors such as the PARP inhibitors. Long‐term treatment with AsiDNA induces a new “alarm down” state in the tumor cells with decrease of NAD level and reactiveness to it. These results suggest that agonist drugs such as AsiDNA could promote a state‐dependent tumor cell evolution by lowering their ability to respond to high “danger” signal. This analysis provides a compelling argument that evolutionary ecology could help drug design development in overcoming fundamental limitation of novel therapies against cancer due to the modification of the targeted tumor cell population during treatment.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
17524563 and 17524571
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Evolutionary Applications, Evolutionary Applications, 2020, ⟨10.1111/eva.12949⟩, Evolutionary Applications, Blackwell, 2020, ⟨10.1111/eva.12949⟩, Evolutionary Applications, Vol 13, Iss 7, Pp 1673-1680 (2020)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ad4c11a01e861a2e802f400b24ce740
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/eva.12949⟩