Cancer chemotherapy Flashcards

1
Q

What is metastasis?

A

When cancer cells spread to other parts of the body through the blood and lymph systems.

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2
Q

What is a tumour?

A

An abnormal mass of tissue that may be solid or fluid-filled.

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3
Q

What are the 4 main types of cancer?

A

Carcinoma- tumours derived from the skin or lining tissues (epithelial cells).
Sarcoma- tumours that start off in connective tissue (cartilage/bones/fat/nerves).
Blastoma- tumours derived from embryonic or immature cells (quite rare).
Lymphoma/leukaemia- arises from the blood forming cells originiating in bone marrow and matures in the blood/ lymph nodes, leukaemia is thought to be the only cancer where tumours are not formed.

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4
Q

List some of the causes of cancer

A

Environmental/lifestyle, radiation, genetic factors, viral/bacteria, chemicals, age etc.

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5
Q

What are the treatments available for cancer?

A

Surgery, chemotherapy, radiation therapy and newer approaches involving biologics.

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6
Q

What are the reasons radiotherapy is used in cancer treatment nowadays?

A

As a stand alone treatment, to shrink a tumour before surgery, to reduce the risk of a cancer coming back after surgery, to complement chemotherapy.

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7
Q

When were nitrogen mustard gases developed and what is their general formula?

A

During WW2, RN(CH2CH2Cl)2

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8
Q

How do nitrogen mustards work?

A

They alkylate and cross-link DNA, preventing further replication.

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9
Q

Name a successful structural analogue of sulfonamide

A

Methotrexate

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10
Q

What does DEPT stand for and aim to do?

A

Directed enzyme prodrug therapy aimed at improving the targeting of drugs to the tumour and minimising side effects, eg ADEPT- uses antibodies to direct the drug to the tumour.

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11
Q

What is the general ring structure for steroids?

A

6, 6, 6, 5

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12
Q

Name 2 anti-cancer drugs that have been developed based on the estrogen receptor and explain whether each one is an agonist or an antagonist

A

Stilboestral- agonist- similar carbon framework and oxygen functionality.
Tamoxifen- antagonist- similar carbon framework so binds, but lack of oxygen functionality.

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13
Q

Describe the general structure of DNA

A

Phosphate-sugar backbone, complementary H-bonding between the bases (which have nucleophillic N/O functionality). DNA forms duplexes (anti-parallel double helix).

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14
Q

What is the obvious limitation to developing a drug that interferes with the production/operation of DNA?

A

We are biosynthesising/replicating DNA constantly, therefore if that is targeted there will be likely toxicity.

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15
Q

How do nitrogen mustards work?

A

Interstrand crosslinking agents (crosslink DNA), therefore preventing replication as the 2 strands can’t unwind to generate 2 new DNA molecules.

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16
Q

What is the name and formula for the most useful nitrogen mustard?

A

Mustine, MeN(CH2CH2Cl)2

17
Q

How was uramustine designed?

A

So that the uracil provided stabilisation and the aim was also that the uracil portion would enhance takeup by the rapidly growing cancer cells in mistake for uracil itself- ie aiming for better selectivity.

18
Q

Define prodrug

A

Inactive compound that is metabolised in the body to give the active form.

19
Q

What is cyclophosphamide and why is it less reactive than earlier mustards?

A

Pro-drug analogue of nitrogen mustard; nitrogen is now tied up as an amide so can be taken orally (big advantage over injection).

20
Q

What enzyme transforms cyclophosphamide in the liver to the active form?

A

Cytochrome p450 (oxidase enzyme).

21
Q

What is the issue with the side product produced from cyclophosphamide and how can it be resolved?

A

ACROLEIN- accumulates in the bladder and can cause bleeding etc. Co-administer with a sulfur compound which mops up acrolein, giving a highly water-soluble adduct for excretion.

22
Q

How does ADEPT work and how is selectivity achieved?

A

An antibody linked to the key enzyme is developed against a tumour antigen and injected into the blood, aiming to selectively bind to the tumour. Then, the prodrug is administered into the blood circulation and hopefully converted into an active cytotoxic drug by the enzyme, only within the tumour. Selectivity is achieved by the tumour specificity of the enzyme.

23
Q

What does carboxypeptidase enzyme convert an amide prodrug into?

A

An active cross-linking agent.

24
Q

What does the beta-lactamase enzyme cleave?

A

The peptide bond in a beta-lactam ring- ie it opens the strained 4-membered ring.

25
Q

What is a DNA intercalating agent and how does it work as a cancer treatment?

A

A substance that inserts itself into DNA and binds by NON COVALENT MEANS, may kill cancer cells by altering the helical structure of DNA and so stopping them from dividing.

26
Q

Name examples of major and minor groove binders

A
Major= doxorubicinm and pixanthrone
Minor= distamycin
27
Q

What is the general required structure of DNA intercalators?

A

Often based on flat aromatic or heteroaromatic compounds that can fit in a groove of DNA between 2 base pairs, thus disrupting the replication process.

28
Q

What non-covalent interactions help to ‘lock’ the intercalating agent into the DNA?

A

Ionic bonds/interactions (drugs often have at least 1 N-group which once protonated can form ionic bonds to the negatively charged phosphate DNA backbone), pi-stacking.

29
Q

Name the enzyme that reduces folic acid in its biosynthetic pathway

A

Dihyrdofolate reductase (DHFR).

30
Q

What does THF stand for?

A

Tetrahydro-folic acid

31
Q

Compare folic acid and methotrexate, suggesting a mode of action for methotrexate

A

Methotrexate is accepted by DHFR then binds to hydroxymethyl transferase, but can’t undergo formylation so blocks folic acid turnover. Acts as an ANTAGONIST.

32
Q

Describe the mode of action of 5-fluorouracil

A

Principally interferes with the biosynthetic route leading to the DNA building block based on thymine, the nucleotide thymidine. It acts as an irreversible inhibitor of thymidylate synthase, blocking the biosynthesis of the key nucleotide thymidine monophosphatase needed for DNA replication. So rapidly dividing cancer cells undergo ‘thymineless cell death’.

33
Q

Describe the simplified biosynthetiic route to thymidine

A

Thymidylate synthetase acts as a catalytic nucleophile in a Michael reaction (nucleophillic addition to an alpha,beta-unsaturated ketone) with 10-formyl-THF providing the one carbon electrophile (Me+). Then, loss of a proton regenerates the enzyme catalyst and re-installs the alkene.

34
Q

Why does 5-fluorouracil irreversibly inhibit thhymidylate synthase?

A

Because (after the addition) the fluorine can’t be removed by a base.

35
Q

What are the major structural elements of the mitotic spindle and what are they formed from?

A

Microtubule polymer, formed from tubulin proteins.

36
Q

What was the drug Taxol extracted from?

A

The bark of Pacific yew trees

37
Q

Describe the mode of action of taxol

A

Stabilises the microtubule polymer and protects it from disassembly so cell division is prevented further down the line.

38
Q

What alternative tree was used to extract taxol and why?

A

European yew, as isolation of the pacific yew tree bark killed the tree (not very sustainable).

39
Q

What closely-related compound to taxol is found in the needles of the European yew tree?

A

10-deacetylbaccatin