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The Role of HSP70 in Cancer and its Exploitation as a Therapeutic Target
Author(s) -
Veronika Martinková,
Filip Trčka,
Bořivoj Vojtěšek,
Petr Müller
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
klinicka onkologie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.204
H-Index - 13
eISSN - 1802-5307
pISSN - 0862-495X
DOI - 10.14735/amko20182s46
Subject(s) - heat shock protein , hsp90 , cancer cell , hsp70 , protein folding , cancer , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , cancer research , biochemistry , genetics , gene
Sustained proliferation and genetic instability of cancer cells are associated with enhanced production of mutated and conformationally unstable proteins. Excessive proteosynthesis along with increased metabolic turnover generates stress conditions that cancer cells must permanently compensate for. Tumor cells thus become dependent on the maintenance of protein homeostasis, which involves protein quality control, folding, transport and stabilization. These tasks are provided by molecular chaperones, predominantly the stress proteins HSP70 and HSP90. Their expression and activity is increased in all malignant tumors, where they associate with their cochaperones to form large multiprotein complexes. HSP70 and HSP90 maintain the malignant phenotype because they facilitate the folding of numerous oncogenic proteins, maintain proliferative potential, and inhibit apoptosis. In this regard, heat-shock proteins represent an important target for cancer therapy because their inactivation results in the simultaneous blockade of multiple signaling pathways. Although several specific HSP90 inhibitors have been developed in the past decade, their antitumor activity as single agents is limited due to the induction of HSP70, which enables cell survival. Inhibitors of HSP70 thus present new possibilities for targeting proteostatic mechanisms in cancer cells.

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