Medical principles and practice : international journal of the Kuwait University, Health Science Centre
-
The management of cancer involves procedures, which include surgery, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Development of chemoresistance is a persistent problem during the treatment of local and disseminated disease. A plethora of cytotoxic drugs that selectively, but not exclusively, target actively proliferating cells include such diverse groups as DNA alkylating agents, antimetabolites, intercalating agents and mitotic inhibitors. ⋯ Adjuvant therapy with P-glycoprotein inhibitors and, in specific instances, the use of growth factor and protein kinase C inhibitors are newer experimental approaches that may also prove effective in abrogating or delaying onset of resistance. Gene knockout using antisense molecules may be another effective way of blocking drug resistance genes. Conversely, drug resistance may also be used to good purpose by transplanting retrovirally transformed CD34 cells expressing the MDR gene to protect the bone marrow during high-dose chemotherapy.
-
Androgens and estrogens are primarily made from dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA), which is made from cholesterol via four steps. First, cholesterol enters the mitochondria with the assistance of the steroidogenic acute regulatory protein (StAR). Mutations in the StAR gene cause congenital lipoid adrenal hyperplasia (lipoid CAH), a potentially lethal disease in which virtually no steroids are made. ⋯ The ratio of the 17,20 lyase to 17alpha-hydroxylase activity of P450c17 determines the ratio of C21 to C19 steroids produced. This ratio is regulated posttranslationally by at least three factors: the abundance of the electron-donating protein P450 oxidoreductase (POR), the presence of cytochrome b5 and the serine phosphorylation of P450c17. Mutations of POR are a new, recently described disorder manifesting as the Antley-Bixler skeletal dysplasia syndrome, and a form of polycystic ovary syndrome.