cyclopamine: a possible cancer treatment or the next thalidomide?

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Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

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Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?. Veratrum californicum. AKA: Corn lily False hellebore Skunk cabbage Family Liliaceae Native to mountain meadows in the Sierra Nevadas and the Rockies. Perennial monocot Grows 1-2 meters tall - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Page 2: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Veratrum californicum AKA:

Corn lily False hellebore Skunk cabbage

Family Liliaceae Native to mountain

meadows in the Sierra Nevadas and the Rockies

Page 3: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Perennial monocot

Grows 1-2 meters tall

Stem/leaves resemble cornstalk

Page 4: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Medicinal Uses Used by native Americans to treat

wounds

Contraceptive

Root is an analgesic and disinfectant

Also used to treat VD

Page 5: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Sheep herds were plagued by unexplained birth defects

Intensive study by the USDA isolated cyclopamine as the causative agent

Page 6: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?
Page 7: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Cyclopamine Method of Action

Page 8: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

But what about cells that have already differentiated?

Required for tissue maintenance and regeneration

T-cell activation Can act as a

mitogen Tissue dependent

Page 9: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Smoothened is a GPCR, no wonder your cells died!

GPCRs (G Protein Coupled Receptor) are responsible for a multitude of signal cascades :1. Adenylate cyclase/cAMP pathway

Activates PKA, which activates ion channels2. Phospholipase C pathway

Secretion and translocation of proteins from the ER3. IP3 pathway:

Releases Ca+ from ER activating4. Ca+/Calmodulin pathway5. Glycogen pathway (via Adenylate cyclase)

Page 10: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Don’t worry, I’m a doctor! Phase I clinical trials underway of a

derivate GDC-0449 (Genentech in collaboration

with Curis) Preliminary results were promising Side effects: loss of hair, weight loss,

otherwise mild toxicity reported Already being billed as “hav[ing] the

potential to become a blockbuster drug…for treating cancers.” (Wong, 2009)

Page 11: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

But what type of cancer does it treat?

Glioblastoma multiforme (brain tumor) 2-3 cases per 100K Most often terminal Median survival = 15 months

(conventional chemotherapy) Without treatment = 4.5 months

(World Heath Organization)

Page 12: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

Why the comparison to thalidomide? If clinical trials are promising and

the FDA is involved, what’s the problem?

Page 13: Cyclopamine: A possible cancer treatment or the next Thalidomide?

What is Thalidomide? Synthetic drug marketed

as a sedative Prescribed to pregnant

women to help with morning sickness

Drug testing conducted on rats

Rats metabolized thalidomide

Late 1950’s children born with Pharcomelia

Later tests on monkeys produced same birth defects as seen in humans

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References (excludes article screenshots)

Berry, L. (n.d.). Sierra Wild Flowers. Retrieved Oct 23, 2009, from Sierrawildflowers.org: http://www.sierrawildflowers.org/veratrum_californicum.htm

Binns, W. L. (1968). Effects of Teratogenic Agents in Range Plants. Cancer Research , 28, 2323-2326.

Keeley. (2002). Biology News. Retrieved Oct 23, 2009, from Bio-Medicine: http://news.bio-medicine.org/biology-news-2/Plant-compound-kills-brain-tumor-cells-6856-1/

Lingham, A. (2000, June). The First Appearance of Thalidomide. Retrieved Oct 23, 2009, from Thalidomide Isomerism and Optical Isomerism: http://www.chm.bris.ac.uk/motm/thalidomide/first.html

Wong, J. F. (2009). Genetic Engineering & Biotechnology News. Retrieved Oct 23, 2009, from GEN: http://www.genengnews.com/articles/chitem.aspx?aid=2518&chid=4