Abstract

The human 80S ribosome is the cellular nucleoprotein nanomachine in charge of protein synthesis that is profoundly affected during cancer transformation by oncogenic proteins and provides cancerous proliferating cells with proteins and therefore biomass. Indeed, cancer is associated with an increase in ribosome biogenesis and mutations in several ribosomal proteins genes are found in ribosomopathies, which are congenital diseases that display an elevated risk of cancer. Ribosomes and their biogenesis therefore represent attractive anti-cancer targets and several strategies are being developed to identify efficient and specific drugs. Homoharringtonine (HHT) is the only direct ribosome inhibitor currently used in clinics for cancer treatments, although many classical chemotherapeutic drugs also appear to impact on protein synthesis. Here we review the role of the human ribosome as a medical target in cancer, and how functional and structural analysis combined with chemical synthesis of new inhibitors can synergize. The possible existence of oncoribosomes is also discussed. The emerging idea is that targeting the human ribosome could not only allow the interference with cancer cell addiction towards protein synthesis and possibly induce their death but may also be highly valuable to decrease the levels of oncogenic proteins that display a high turnover rate (MYC, MCL1). Cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM) is an advanced method that allows the visualization of human ribosome complexes with factors and bound inhibitors to improve our understanding of their functioning mechanisms mode. Cryo-EM structures could greatly assist the foundation phase of a novel drug-design strategy. One goal would be to identify new specific and active molecules targeting the ribosome in cancer such as derivatives of cycloheximide, a well-known ribosome inhibitor.

Highlights

  • In normal cells, protein synthesis (PS) is tightly linked to their proliferative needs [1,2]

  • The research to define the role of ribosomes during malignant transformation evolved from the question asked in 2003 by Ruggero and Pandolfi “Does the ribosome translate cancer?“ [40] to the 2017 review of Sulima et al.: “How ribosomes translate cancer“ that highlighted how the ribosome can be considered as an important player in cancer development [41] and as a potential target as demonstrated by the anti-leukemic effects displayed by eukaryotic-specific antibiotics [42]

  • For drugs of the platinium family, it has been recently shown that oxaliplatin affects cancer cells by triggering a ribosome biogenesis stress response that leads to cell death, in contrast to cisplatin and carboplatin, that instead act through an induction of DNA damage; likely explaining the differences in tumor type selectivity and side-effect profiles [58]

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Summary

Introduction

Protein synthesis (PS) is tightly linked to their proliferative needs [1,2]. CP: central protuberance; A:which aminoacyl site; peptidyltosite; E: exit specificity using chemically modified ligands.

The Human Ribosome
Ribosomal Genes Mutations in Cancer
The Ribosome as an Important Actor in Cancer
Targeting Ribosome Biogenesis
Ribosomes
Who Is the Best Target in Cancer
Direct Targeting of the 80S Ribosome
Ribosome Inhibition in Hematopoietic Malignancies
Ribosome Inhibition in Various Solid Cancers
Ribosome Inhibitors and Metastasis
Ribosome Inhibitors and Immunotherapies
Combining Ribosome Inhibition with Classical Chemotherapeutic Drugs
Advent of High-Resolution Cryo-EM Allows Structure-Guided Drug Design
Design of Cycloheximide
Findings
Future Perspectives
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