Discovery and development of tubulin inhibitors

Tubulin inhibitors are drugs that interfere directly with the tubulin system, which is in contrast to those drugs acting on DNA for cancer chemotherapy. Microtubules play an important role in eukaryotic cells. Alpha- and beta-tubulin, the main components of microtubules, have gained considerable interest because of their function and biophysical properties and has become the subject of intense study. The addition of tubulin ligands can affect microtubule stability and function, including mitosis, cell motion and intracellular organelle transport. Tubulin binding molecules have generated significant interest after the introduction of the taxanes into clinical oncology and the general use of the vinca alkaloids. These compounds inhibit cell mitosis by binding to the protein tubulin in the mitotic spindle and preventing polymerization or depolymerization into the microtubules. This mode of action is also shared with another natural agent called colchicine.

History

The first known compound which binds to tubulin was colchicine, it was isolated from the autumn crocus, Colchicum autumnale, but it has not been used for cancer treatment. First anticancer drugs approved for clinical use were Vinca alkaloids, vinblastine and vincristine in the 1960s. They were isolated from extracts leaves of the Catharanthus roseus (Vinca rosea) plant at the University of Western Ontario in 1958.[1] First drug belong to the taxanes and paclitaxel, discovered in extracts from the bark of the yew tree, Taxus brevifolia, in 1967 by Monroe Wall and Mansukh Wani but, its tubulin inhibition activity was not known until 1979. Yews trees are poor source of active agents what limited the development of taxanes for over 20 years until discover the way of synthesis.[1] In December 1992 paclitaxel was approved to use in chemotherapy.[2]

Tubulin and the microtubule system

Function

Formation of microtubule

Microtubules are the key components of the cytoskeleton of eukaryotic cells and has an important role in various cellular functions such as intracellular migration and transport, cell shape maintenance, polarity, cell signaling and mitosis.[3] It plays a critical role in cell division by involving in the movement and attachment of the chromosomes during various stages of mitosis. Therefore, microtubule dynamics is an important target for the developing anti-cancer drugs.[1]

Structure

Microtubules are composed of two globular protein subunits, α- and β – tubulin. These two subunits combine to form an α,β- heterodimer which then assembles in a filamentous tube-shaped structure. The tubulin hetero-dimers arrange themselves in a head to tail manner with the α-subunit of one dimer coming in contact with the β- subunit of the other . This arrangement results in the formation of long protein fibres called protofilaments . These protofilaments form the backbone of the hollow, cylindrical microtubule which is about 25 nanometers in diameter and varies from 200 nanometers to 25 micrometers in length. About 12-13 protofilaments arrange themselves in parallel to form a C-shaped protein sheet, which then curls around to give a pipe-like structure called the microtubule. The head to tail arrangement of the hetero dimers gives polarity to the resulting microtubule, which has an α-subunit at one end and a β-subunit at the other end. The α-tubulin end has negative (-) charges while the β-tubulin end has positive (+)charges.[3] The microtubule grows from discrete assembly sites in the cells called Microtubule organizing centers (MTOCs), which are a network of microtubule associated proteins (MAP).[4][5]

Two molecules of energy rich guanosine triphosphate (GTP) are also important components of the microtubule structure. One molecule of GTP is tightly bound to the α-tubulin and is non-exchangeable whereas the other GTP molecule is bound to β-tubulin and can be easily exchanged with guanosine diphosphate (GDP). The stability of the microtubule will depend on whether the β-end is occupied by GTP or GDP. A microtubule having a GTP molecule at the β-end will be stable and continue to grow whereas a microtubule having a GDP molecule at the β-end will be unstable and will depolymerise rapidly.[4][5]

Microtubule dynamics

Microtubules are not static but they are highly dynamic polymers and exhibit two kinds of dynamic behaviors : 'dynamic instability' and 'treadmilling'. Dynamic instability is a process in which the microtubule ends switches between periods of growth and shortening. The two ends are not equal, the α-tubulin ringed (-)end is less dynamic while the more dynamic β-tubulin ringed (+) end grows and shortens more rapidly. Microtubule undergoes long periods of slow lengthening, brief periods of rapid shortening and also a pause in which there is neither growth nor shortening.[3][5][6] Dynamic instability is characterized by four variables: the rate of microtubule growth; the rate of shortening; frequency of transition from the growth or paused state to shortening (called a 'catastrophe') and the frequency of transition from shortening to growth or pause (called a 'rescue'). The other dynamic behavior called treadmilling is the net growth of the microtubule at one end and the net shortening at the other end. It involves the intrinsic flow of tubulin sub-units from the plus end to the minus end. Both the dynamic behaviors are important and a particular microtubule may exhibit primarily dynamic instability, treadmilling or a mixture of both.[6][7]

Mechanism of action

Agents which act as inhibitors of tubulin, also act as inhibitors of cell division. Microtubule exists in a continuous dynamic state of growing and shortening by reversible association and dissociation of α/β-tubulin heterodimers at both the ends. This dynamic behavior and resulting control over the length of the microtubule is vital to the proper functioning of the mitotic spindle in mitosis i.e., cell division.

Microtubule is involved in different stages of the cell cycle. During the first stage or prophase, the microtubules required for cell division begins to form and grow towards the newly formed chromosomes forming a bundle of microtubules called the mitotic spindle. During prometaphase and metaphase this spindle attaches itself to the chromosomes at a particular point called the kinetochore and undergoes several growing and shortening periods in tuning with the back and forth oscillations of the chromosomes. In anaphase also, the microtubules attached to the chromosomes maintain a carefully regulated shortening and lengthening process. Thus the presence of a drug which can suppress the microtubule dynamics is sufficient to block the cell cycle and result in the death of the cells by apoptosis.[1][8][9]

Tubulin inhibitors thus act by interfering with the dynamics of the microtubule, i.e., growing (polymerization) and shortening (depolymerization). One class of inhibitors operate by inhibiting polymerization of tubulin to form microtubules and are called polymerization inhibitors like the colchine analogues and the vinca alkaloids. They decrease the microbule polymer mass in the cells at high concentration and act as microtubule-destabilizing agents. The other class of inhibitors operate by inhibiting the depolymerization of polymerized tubulin and increases the microtubule polymer mass in the cells. They act as microbule-stabilizing agents and are called depolymerization inhibitors like the paclitaxel analogues.[3] These three classes of drugs seems to operate by slightly different mechanism.

Tubulin inhibitors binding site[10]

Colchine analogues blocks cell division by disrupting the microtubule. It has been reported that the β-subunit of tubulin is involved in colchine binding. It binds to the soluble tubulin to form colchine-tubulin complex. This complex along with the normal tubulins then undergoes polymerization to form the microtubule. However the presence of this T-C complex prevents further polymerization of the microtubule . This complex brings about a conformational change which blocks the tubulin dimers from further addition and thereby prevents the growth of the microtubule. As the T-C complex slows down the addition of new dimers, the microtubule disassembles due to structural imbalance or instability during the metaphase of mitosis.[11]

The Vinca alkaloids bind to the β-subunit of tubulin dimers at a distinct region called the Vinca-binding domain. They bind to tubulin rapidly, and this binding is reversible and independent of temperature (between 0 °C and 37 °C). In contrast to colchine, vinca alkaloids bind to the microtubule directly. They do not first form a complex with the soluble tubulin nor do they copolymerize to form the microtubule, however they are capable of bringing about a conformational change in tubulin in connection with tubulin self-association.[6] Vinca alkaloids bind to the tubulin with high affinity at the microtubule ends but with low affinity at the tubulin sites present along the sides of the microtubule cylinder. The binding of these drugs at the high affinity sites results in strong kinetic suppression of tubulin exchange even at low drug concentration while their binding to the low affinity sites in relatively high drug concentration depolymerizes microtubules.[1]

In contrast to colchine and vinca alkaloids, paclitaxel enhances microtubule polymerization promoting both the nucleation and elongation phases of the polymerization reaction, and it reduces the critical tubulin sub-unit concentration (i.e., soluble tubulin concentration at steady- state). Microtubules polymerized in presence of paclitaxel are extremely stable.[1] The binding mechanism of the paclitaxel mimic that of the GTP nucleotide along with some important differences. GTP binds at one end of the tubulin dimer keeping contact with the next dimer along each of the protofilament while the paclitaxel binds to one side of β-tubulin keeping contact with the next protofilament. GTP binds to unassembled tubulin dimers whereas paclitaxel binding sites are located only in assembled tubulin. The hydrolysis of GTP permits the disassembly and the regulation of the microtubule system; however, the activation of tubulin by paclitaxel results in permanent stabilization of the microtubule. Thus the suppression of microtubule dynamics was described to be the main cause of the inhibition of cell division and of tumor cell death in paclitaxel treated cells.[12]

Tubulin binding drugs

Tubulin binding molecules have gained much interest among cytotoxic agents due to its success in clinical oncology. They differ from the other anticancer drugs in their mode of action because they target the mitiotic spindle and not the DNA. Tubulin binding drugs have been classified on the basis of their mode of action and binding site[4][13][14] as:

I. Tubulin depolymerization inhibitors

a) Paclitaxel site ligands, includes the paclitaxel, epothilone, docetaxel, discodermolide etc.

II. Tubulin polymerization inhibitors

a) Colchicine binding site, includes the colchicine, combrestatin, 2-methoxyestradiol, methoxy benzenesulfonamides (E7010) etc.

b) Vinca alkaloids binding site,[15] includes vinblastine, vincristine, vinorelbine, vinfluine, dolastatins, halichondrins, hemiasterlins, cryptophysin 52, etc.

Table: Tubulin inhibitors with their binding sites, therapeutic uses and stages of clinical development.[6][16]
Classes of tubulin inhibitorsBinding domainRelated drugs or analogsTherapeutic usesStage of clinical development
Polymerization inhibitors Vinca domain Vinblastine Hodgkin's disease, testicular germ cell cancer in clinical use; 22 combination trials in progress
Vincristine Leukemia, lymphomas In clinical use; 108 combination trials in progress
Vinorelbine Solid tumours, lymphomas, lung cancer In clinical use; 29 phase I–III clinical trials in progress (single and combination)
Vinflunine Bladder, non-small-cell lung cancer, breast cancer Phase III
Crytophycin 52 Solid tumours Phase III finished
Halichondrins - Phase I
Dolastatins Potential vascular-targeting agent Phase I; phase II completed
Hemiasterlins - Phase I
Colchicine domain Colchicine Non-neoplastic diseases (gout, familial mediterranean fever) Approved in 2009 by FDA under the Unapproved Drugs Initiative
Combretastatins Potential vascular-targeting agent Phase I
2-Methoxyestradiol - Phase I
E7010 Solid tumours Phase I, II
Depolymerization inhibitors Taxan site Paclitaxel (Taxol) Ovarian, breast and lung tumours, Kaposi's sarcoma; trials with numerous other tumours In clinical use; 207 Phase I–III trials in the United States; TL00139 is in Phase I trials
Docetaxel (Taxotere) Prostate, brain and lung tumours 8 trials in the United States (Phases I–III)
Epothilone Paclitaxel-resistant tumours Phases I–III
Discodermolide - Phase I
Tubulin inhibitors
Vinca domain
Vinblastine Vincristine Vinorelbine
Vinflunine Cryptophycin 52 Halichondrin B
Dolastatin 10 Dolastatin 15 Hemiasterlin A
Hemiasterlin B
Colchicine domain
Colchicine Combretastatin E7010
2-Methoxyestradiol
TAXANE SITE
Docetaxel Paclitaxel Epothilone A
Epothilone B Discodermolide

Structure activity relationship (SAR)

SAR of colchine analogous

Colchicine is one of the oldest known antimitotic drugs and in the past years much research has been done in order to isolate or develop compounds having similar structure but high activity and less toxicity. This resulted in the discovery of a number of colchine analogues. The structure of colchicine is made up of three rings, a trimethoxy benzene ring (ring A), a methoxy tropone ring (ring C) and a seven-membered ring (ring B) with an acetamido group located at its C-7 position. The trimethoxy phenyl group of colchicine not only helps in stabilizing the tubulin-colchine complex but is also important for antitubulin activity in conjunction with the ring C. The 3-methoxy group increased the binding ability whereas the 1-methoxy group helped in attaining the correct conformation of the molecule. The stability of the tropone ring and the position of the methoxy and carbonyl group are crucial for the binding ability of the compound. The 10-methoxy group can be replaced with halogen, alkyl, alkoxy or amino groups without affecting tubulin binding affinity, while bulky substituents reduce the activity. Ring B when expanded showed reduced activity, however the ring and its C-7 side chain is thought to affect the conformation of the colchine analogues rather than their tubulin binding ability. Substitution at C-5 resulted in loss of activity whereas attachment of annulated heterocyclic ring systems to ring B resulted in highly potent compound.[11]

SAR of palitaxel analogous

Paclitaxel has achieved great success as an anti-cancer drug, yet there has been continuous effort to improve its efficacy and develop analogues which are more active and have greater bioavailability and specificity. The importance of C-13 substituted phenylisoserine side chain to bioactivity of paclitaxel has been known for a long time. Several replacements at the C-3' substitution have been tested. Replacement of the C-3' phenyl group with alkyl or alkyneyl groups greatly enhanced the activity, and with CF3 group at that position in combination with modification of the 10-Ac with other acyl groups increased the activity several times. Another modification of C-3' with cyclopropane and epoxide moieties were also found to be potent. Most of the analogues without ring A were found to be much less active than palitaxel itself. The analogues with amide side chain at C-13 are less active than their ester counterpart. Also deoxygenation at position 1 showed reduced activity. Preparation of 10-α-spiro epoxide and its 7-MOM ether gave compounds having comparable cytotoxicity and tubulin assembly activity as that of paclitaxel. Substitution with C-6-α-OH and C-6-β-OH gave analogues which were equipotent to paclitaxel in tubulin assembly assay. Finally the oxetane ring is found to play an important role during interaction with tubulin.[21]

SAR of Vinblastine analogues

Vinblastine is a highly potent drug which also has serious side effects especially on the neurological system. Therefore, new synthetic analogues were developed with the goal of obtaining more efficient and less toxic drugs. The stereochemical configurations at C-20', C-16' and C-14' in the velbanamine portion are critical and inversion leads to loss of activity. The C-16' carboxymethyl group is important for activity since decarboxylated dimer is inactive. Structural variation at C-15'- C-20' in the velbanamine ring is well tolerated. The upper skeletal modification of vinblastine gave vinorelbine which shows comparable activity as that of vinblastine. Another analogue prepared was the difluoro derivative of vinorelbine which showed improved in vivo antitumor activity. It was discovered that fluorination at C-19' position of vinorelbine dramatically increased the in vivo activity. Most of the SAR studies involve the vindoline portion of bis-indole alkaloids because modification at C-16 and C-17 offers good opportunities for developing new analogues. The replacement of the ester group with an amide group at the C-16 resulted in the development of vindesine. Similarly replacement of the acetyl group at C-16 with L-trp-OC2H5, d-Ala(P)-(OC2H5)2, L-Ala(P)-(OC2H5)2 and I-Vla(P)-(OC2H5)2 gave rise to new analogues having anti- tubulin activity. Also it was found that the vindoline's indole methyl group is a useful position to functionalize potentially and develop new, potent vinblastine derivatives. A new series of semi-synthetic C-16 -spiro-oxazolidine-1,3-diones prepared from 17-deacetyl vinblastine showed good anti-tubulin activity and lower cytotoxicity. Vinglycinate a glycinate prodrug derived from the C-17-OH group of vinblastine showed similar antitumor activity and toxicity as that of vinblastine.[22]

Limitations

Side effects

Human factors

Limitations in anticancer therapy occur mainly due to two reasons; because of patient's organism or can be caused by specific genetic alterations in the tumor cells. From the patient, therapy is limited by poor absorption of a drug what lead to low concentration of active agent in the blood and small amount deliver to the tumor. Low serum level of a drug can be also caused by rapid metabolism and excretion associated with affinity to intestinal or/and liver cytochrome P450. Other reason is instability and degradation of drugs in gastro-intestinal environment. Serious problem is also variability between patients what causes different bioavailability after administration equal dose of a drug and different tolerance to effect of chemotherapy agents. The second problem is particularly important in treatment elderly people. Their body is weaker and need to apply lower doses, often below therapeutic level. Another problem with anticancer agents is their limited aqueous solubility what substantially reduces absorption of a drug. Problems with delivery of drags to the tumor occur also when active agent has high molecular weight which limits tissue penetration or the tumor has large volume prevent for penetration.[3][25]

Drug resistance

Multidrug resistance is the most important limitation in anticancer therapy. It can develop in many chemically distinct compounds. Until now, several mechanisms are known to develop the resistance. The most common is production of so-called "efflux pumps". The pumps remove drugs from tumor cells which lead to low drug concentration in the target, below therapeutic level. Efflux is caused by P-glycoprotein called also the multidrug transporter. This protein is a product of multidrug resistance gene MDR1 and a member of family of ATP-dependent transporters (ATP-binding cassette). P-glycoprotein occurs in every organism and serves to protect the body from xenobiotics and is involved in moving nutrients and other biologically important compounds inside one cell or between cells. P-glycoprotein detects substrates when they enter the plasma membrane and bind them which causes activation of one of the ATP-binding domains. The next step is hydrolysis of ATP, which leads to a change in the shape of P-gp and opens a channel through which the drug is pumped out of the cell. Hydrolysis of a second molecule of ATP results in closing of the channel and the cycle is repeated. P-glycoprotein has affinity to hydrophobic drugs with a positive charge or electrically neutral and is often over-expressed in many human cancers. Some tumors, e.g. lung cancer, do not over-express this transporter but also are able to develop the resistance. It was discovered that another transporter MRP1 also work as the efflux pump, but in this case substrates are negatively charged natural compounds or drugs modified by glutathione, conjugation, glycosylation, sulfation and glucuronylation. Drugs can enter into a cell in few kinds of ways. Major routes are: diffusion across the plasma membrane, through receptor or transporter or by the endocytosis process. Cancer can develop the resistance by mutations to their cells which result in alterations in the surface of cells or in impaired endocytosis. Mutation can eliminate or change transporters or receptors which allows drugs to enter into the tumor cell. Other cause of drug resistance is a mutation in β tubulin which cause alterations in binding sites and a given drug cannot be bound to its target. Tumors also change expression isoforms of tubulin for these ones, which are not targets for antimitotic drugs e.g. overexpress βIII-tubulin. In addition tumor cells express other kinds of proteins and change microtubule dynamic to counteract effect of anticancer drugs. Drug resistance can also develop due to the interruption in therapy.[3][5][6][25]

Others

Future drug development

Because of numerous adverse effect and limitations in use, new drugs with better properties are needed. Especially are desired improvements in antitumor activity, toxicity profile, drug formulation and pharmacology.[27] Currently have been suggested few approaches in development of novel therapeutic agents with better properties

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Jordan, M. (2012). "Mechanism of Action of Antitumor Drugs that Interact with Microtubules and Tubulin". Current Medicinal Chemistry-Anti-Cancer Agents. 2 (1): 1–17. doi:10.2174/1568011023354290. PMID 12678749.
  2. Gordaliza, M. (2008). "Natural products as leads to anticancer drugs". Clinical and Translational Oncology. 9 (12): 767–76. doi:10.1007/s12094-007-0138-9. PMID 18158980.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Perez, E. A. (2009). "Microtubule inhibitors: Differentiating tubulin-inhibiting agents based on mechanisms of action, clinical activity, and resistance". Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. 8 (8): 2086–95. doi:10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-09-0366. PMID 19671735.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Islam, Mohd.; Iskander, Magdy (2004). "Microtubulin Binding Sites as Target for Developing Anticancer Agents". Mini-Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry. 4 (10): 1077–104. doi:10.2174/1389557043402946. PMID 15579115.
  5. 1 2 3 4 Pellegrini, Federico; Budman, Daniel R (2005). "Review: Tubulin Function, Action of Antitubulin Drugs, and New Drug Development". Cancer Investigation. 23 (3): 264–73. doi:10.1081/CNV-200055970. PMID 15948296.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Jordan, Mary Ann; Wilson, Leslie (2004). "Microtubules as a target for anticancer drugs". Nature Reviews Cancer. 4 (4): 253–65. doi:10.1038/nrc1317. PMID 15057285.
  7. TitoFojo, The role of microtubules in Cell Biology, Neurobiology and Oncology, Humana Press.
  8. 1 2 3 4 Jordan, Allan; Hadfield, John A.; Lawrence, Nicholas J.; McGown, Alan T. (1998). "Tubulin as a target for anticancer drugs: Agents which interact with the mitotic spindle". Medicinal Research Reviews. 18 (4): 259–96. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1098-1128(199807)18:4<259::AID-MED3>3.0.CO;2-U. PMID 9664292.
  9. Bhalla, Kapil N (2003). "Microtubule-targeted anticancer agents and apoptosis". Oncogene. 22 (56): 9075–86. doi:10.1038/sj.onc.1207233. PMID 14663486.
  10. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Morris, P. G.; Fornier, M. N. (2008). "Microtubule Active Agents: Beyond the Taxane Frontier". Clinical Cancer Research. 14 (22): 7167–72. doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-08-0169. PMID 19010832.
  11. 1 2 Chen, Jing; Liu, Tao; Dong, Xiaowu; Hu, Yongzhou (2009). "Recent Development and SAR Analysis of Colchicine Binding Site Inhibitors". Mini-Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry. 9 (10): 1174–90. doi:10.2174/138955709789055234. PMID 19817710.
  12. Abal, M.; Andreu, J.; Barasoain, I. (2003). "Taxanes: Microtubule and Centrosome Targets, and Cell Cycle Dependent Mechanisms of Action". Current Cancer Drug Targets. 3 (3): 193–203. doi:10.2174/1568009033481967. PMID 12769688.
  13. Hamel, Ernest (1996). "Antimitotic natural products and their interactions with tubulin". Medicinal Research Reviews. 16 (2): 207–31. doi:10.1002/(SICI)1098-1128(199603)16:2<207::AID-MED4>3.0.CO;2-4. PMID 8656780.
  14. Kingston, David G. I. (2009). "Tubulin-Interactive Natural Products as Anticancer Agents(1)". Journal of Natural Products. 72 (3): 507–15. doi:10.1021/np800568j. PMC 2765517Freely accessible. PMID 19125622.
  15. Cragg, Gordon M.; Newman, David J. (2004). "A Tale of Two Tumor Targets: Topoisomerase I and Tubulin. The Wall and Wani Contribution to Cancer Chemotherapy†". Journal of Natural Products. 67 (2): 232–44. doi:10.1021/np030420c. PMID 14987065.
  16. 1 2 3 4 Kuppens, Isa (2006). "Current State of the Art of New Tubulin Inhibitors in the Clinic". Current Clinical Pharmacology. 1 (1): 57–70. doi:10.2174/157488406775268200. PMID 18666378.
  17. Okouneva, Tatiana; Hill, Bridget T.; Wilson, Leslie; Jordan, Mary Ann (2003). "The Effects of Vinflunine, Vinorelbine, and Vinblastine on Centromere Dynamics". Molecular Cancer Therapeutics. 2 (5): 427–36. PMID 12748304.
  18. Molad, Yair (2002). "Update on colchicine and its mechanism of action". Current Rheumatology Reports. 4 (3): 252–6. doi:10.1007/s11926-002-0073-2. PMID 12010611.
  19. Lakhani, Nehal J.; Sarkar, Mohamadi A.; Venitz, Jurgen; Figg, William D. (2003). "2-Methoxyestradiol, a Promising Anticancer Agent". Pharmacotherapy. 23 (2): 165–72. doi:10.1592/phco.23.2.165.32088. PMID 12587805.
  20. http://www.paclitaxel.org/[]
  21. Fang, W.-; Liang, X.- (2005). "Recent Progress in Structure Activity Relationship and Mechanistic Studies of Taxol Analogues". Mini-Reviews in Medicinal Chemistry. 5 (1): 1–12. doi:10.2174/1389557053402837. PMID 15638787.
  22. Lixin Zhang, Arnold L. Demain (2005), Natural products: drug discovery and therapeutic medicine.Natural products: drug discovery and therapeutic medicine
  23. del Pino BM (Feb 23, 2010). "Chemotherapy-induced Peripheral Neuropathy". NCI Cancer Bulletin. p. 6.
  24. Hazardous Substances Data Bank (HSDB) http://toxnet.nlm.nih.gov[]
  25. 1 2 Gottesman, Michael M. (2002). "Mechanisms of cancer drug resistance". Annual Review of Medicine. 53: 615–27. doi:10.1146/annurev.med.53.082901.103929. PMID 11818492.
  26. Ivachtchenko, Alexandre; Kiselyov, Alex; Tkachenko, Sergey; Ivanenkov, Yan; Balakin, Konstantin (2007). "Novel Mitotic Targets and Their Small-Molecule Inhibitors". Current Cancer Drug Targets. 7 (8): 766–84. doi:10.2174/156800907783220499. PMID 18220536.
  27. 1 2 3 Attard, Gerhardt; Greystoke, Alastair; Kaye, Stan; De Bono, Johann (2006). "Update on tubulin-binding agents". Pathologie Biologie. 54 (2): 72–84. doi:10.1016/j.patbio.2005.03.003. PMID 16545633.
  28. 1 2 Terwogt, Jetske M.Meerum; Schellens, Jan H.M.; Huinink, Wim W.ten Bokkel; Beijnen, Jos H. (1999). "Clinical pharmacology of anticancer agents in relation to formulations and administration routes". Cancer Treatment Reviews. 25 (2): 83–101. doi:10.1053/ctrv.1998.0107. PMID 10395834.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/10/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.