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Current Drug Metabolism

Editor-in-Chief

ISSN (Print): 1389-2002
ISSN (Online): 1875-5453

Novel Orphan Nuclear Receptors-Coregulator Interactions Controlling Anti-Cancer Drug Metabolism

Author(s): Radharani Gollamudi, Divya Gupta, Sanjay Goel and Sridhar Mani

Volume 9, Issue 7, 2008

Page: [611 - 613] Pages: 3

DOI: 10.2174/138920008785821701

Price: $65

Abstract

In recent years, it has become clear that drug metabolizing enzymes and efflux transporters are directly under the control of tissue-specific orphan receptors, mainly pregnenolone x-receptor (PXR), and constitutive androstene receptor (CAR), that coordinately regulate their transcription. The consequences of xenobiotic activation of these receptors leads to unpredictability of drug kinetics and in some cases drug pharmacodynamics. Since receptor specific co-regulators are critically involved in this process, this review serves to highlight important new advances in this area of research. Specifically, this review focuses on co-regulator interactions described for PXR and CAR and some models that provide an explanation for receptor activation and repression. PXR is basally repressed and is activated in a ligand and tissue specific manner through a complex shift in co-repressor (Silencing mediator of retinoid and thyroid receptor (SMRT) and nuclear receptor co-repressor (N-CoR)) and co-activator (Steroid receptor coactivator-1(SRC-1), PPAR and glucocorticoid receptor coactivator-1(PGC-1), Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4 (HNF-4)) interactions favoring activation. Other higher order complexes impinge on this shift and include small heterodimer partner (SHP) mediated inhibition of co-activators and still others involved in histone acetylation/deacetylation (e.g., SWI/SNF, HDACs). Similar interactions have been proposed for CAR and these will be discussed in detail. Finally, this review will focus on the implications of understanding receptor-co-regulator interactions with the eventual aim of assessing polymorphisms in this transcriptional complex as a method to normalize the effects of drug metabolism.

Keywords: Cancer chemotherapy, coregulators, histone acetylation, nuclear receptors, pregnenolone X receptor


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