登录

Mitogens and their receptors play a crucial role in controlling the progression of the cell cycle. However, the loss of mitogenic control over cell division leads to tumor formation. Therefore, mitogens and mitogen receptors play an important role in cancer research. For instance, the epidermal growth factor (EGF) - a type of mitogen and its transmembrane receptor (EGFR), decides the fate of the cell's proliferation. When EGF binds to EGFR, a member of the ErbB family of tyrosine kinase receptors present on the cell membrane, it transmits a growth-inducing signal to the corresponding cells. However, overactivation of EGFR can lead to tumor growth, invasion, and metastasis. It needs to be inactivated in the cancer cells to induce cell cycle arrest, dedifferentiation, or programmed cell death. Hence, the development of novel and targeted cancer therapies requires a deeper understanding of the mechanism and coordination between the mitogen and the cell cycle.

Role of Epidermal Growth Factor (EGF) as a mitogen in cancer therapeutics

In non-malignant tissues, the number of EGFR on the cell surface is tightly regulated to ensure that the cell division rate accurately matches the tissue's requirement. However, in cancerous cells, EGFR is overexpressed and is often perpetually stimulated by EGF or EGF-like proteins secreted by the cancer cell itself. A similar effect may occur when a mutation in EGFR drives the receptor into a state of continual activation. Overexpression of EGFR and closely associated ErbB2 receptors are associated with more aggressive clinical behavior, such as in Grade 3 cancers where tumor cells can likely spread to other parts of the body. Therefore, therapies directed at inhibiting the function of overactive receptors in the cancer cells can be used as anti-cancer therapies.

Monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) that block activation of EGFR and ErbB2 have been developed. These MAbs have shown promising preclinical studies. For example, trastuzumab, an anti-ErbB2 MAb, was recently approved to treat patients with metastatic ErbB2-overexpressing breast cancer. Another MAb, IMC-C225, an anti-EGFR, has shown impressive activity to revert tumor cells' resistance to chemotherapy.

Tags
MitogensCell CycleMitogenic ControlTumor FormationMitogen ReceptorsCancer ResearchEpidermal Growth Factor EGFTransmembrane Receptor EGFRErbB FamilyTyrosine Kinase ReceptorsGrowth inducing SignalOveractivation Of EGFRTumor GrowthInvasionMetastasisCancer TherapiesCell Cycle ArrestDedifferentiationProgrammed Cell DeathNovel And Targeted Cancer TherapiesMechanism And CoordinationEpidermal Growth Factor EGFCancer TherapeuticsNon malignant TissuesOverexpression Of EGFR

来自章节 17:

article

Now Playing

17.8 : Mitogens and the Cell Cycle

Cell Proliferation

6.2K Views

article

17.1 : 什么是细胞周期?

Cell Proliferation

9.5K Views

article

17.2 : 相间

Cell Proliferation

4.3K Views

article

17.3 : 细胞周期控制系统

Cell Proliferation

11.6K Views

article

17.4 : 正调节分子

Cell Proliferation

5.1K Views

article

17.5 : 抑制 cdk 活性

Cell Proliferation

4.5K Views

article

17.6 : S-CDK 启动 DNA 复制

Cell Proliferation

4.6K Views

article

17.7 : M-CDK 驱动向有丝分裂的转变

Cell Proliferation

5.4K Views

article

17.9 : 复制细胞衰老

Cell Proliferation

3.5K Views

article

17.10 : 异常增殖

Cell Proliferation

4.3K Views

article

17.11 : 细胞协调生长和增殖

Cell Proliferation

4.4K Views

JoVE Logo

政策

使用条款

隐私

科研

教育

关于 JoVE

版权所属 © 2025 MyJoVE 公司版权所有,本公司不涉及任何医疗业务和医疗服务。