Emerging strategies for EphA2 receptor targeting for cancer therapeutics

M Tandon, SV Vemula, SK Mittal - Expert opinion on therapeutic …, 2011 - Taylor & Francis
Expert opinion on therapeutic targets, 2011Taylor & Francis
Importance of the field: High mortality rates with cancers warrant further development of
earlier diagnostics and better treatment strategies. Membrane-bound erythropoietin-
producing hepatocellular receptor tyrosine kinase class A2 (EphA2) is overexpressed in
breast, prostate, urinary bladder, skin, lung, ovary and brain cancers. Areas covered in this
review: EphA2 overexpression in cancers, its signaling mechanisms and strategies to target
its deregulation. What the reader will gain: High EphA2 expression in cancer cells is …
Importance of the field: High mortality rates with cancers warrant further development of earlier diagnostics and better treatment strategies. Membrane-bound erythropoietin-producing hepatocellular receptor tyrosine kinase class A2 (EphA2) is overexpressed in breast, prostate, urinary bladder, skin, lung, ovary and brain cancers.
Areas covered in this review: EphA2 overexpression in cancers, its signaling mechanisms and strategies to target its deregulation.
What the reader will gain: High EphA2 expression in cancer cells is correlated with a poor prognosis associated with recurrence due to enhanced metastasis. Interaction of the EphA2 receptor with its ligand (e.g., ephrinA1) triggers events that are deregulated and implicated in carcinogenesis. EphrinA1-independent oncogenic activity and ephrinA1-dependent tumor suppressor roles for EphA2 are described. Molecular interactions of EphA2 with signaling proteins are associated with the modulation of cytoskeleton dynamics, cell adhesion, proliferation, differentiation and metastasis. The deregulated signaling by EphA2 and its involvement in oncogenesis provide multiple avenues for the rational design of intervention approaches.
Take home message: EphA2 has been tested as a drug target using multiple approaches such as agonist antibodies, RNA interference, immunotherapy, virus vector-mediated gene transfer, small-molecule inhibitors and nanoparticles. With over a decade of research, encouraging results with targeting of EphA2 expression in various pre-clinical cancer models necessitate further studies.
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