Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2163161 Seminars in Oncology 2006 7 Pages PDF
Abstract
Significant achievements in the basic sciences have led to a greater knowledge of the underlying signaling pathways in renal cell cancer (RCC), including the mammalian target of rapamycin (mTOR) pathway (phosphoinositide 3-kinase/Akt pathway). The mTOR pathway has a central role in the regulation of cell growth and increasing evidence suggests its dysregulation in cancer. Receiving input from multiple signals, including growth factors, hormones, nutrients, and other stimulants or mitogens, the pathway stimulates protein synthesis by phosphorylating key translation regulators such as ribosomal S6 kinase. The mTOR pathway also contributes to many other critical cellular functions, including protein degradation and angiogenesis. Hence, use of inhibitors of the pathway represents a new strategy for the targeted treatment of RCC, and mTOR inhibitors have already shown promising clinical efficacy and low toxicity profiles in unselected patients with metastatic RCC. As with other new, targeted cancer agents, the future use of mTOR inhibitors will benefit from reproducible biomarkers that can be used in the clinic to identify patients most likely to respond and to document modulation of the drug target in addition to clinical response.
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