Robert Clarke | |
---|---|
Nationality | Northern Irish |
Occupation(s) | Cancer researcher and academic administrator |
Awards | Fellow, American Association for the Advancement of Science |
Academic background | |
Education | B.S., Biological Sciences M.S., Biochemistry Ph.D., Biochemistry D.Sc., Biochemistry |
Alma mater | Ulster University Queen's University Belfast |
Academic work | |
Institutions | The Hormel Institute,University of Minnesota Georgetown University |
Robert Clarke is a Northern Irish cancer researcher and academic administrator. He is the executive director of The Hormel Institute,a professor of biochemistry,Molecular Biology and Biophysics at the University of Minnesota, [1] and an adjunct professor of oncology at Georgetown University.
With his work focused in breast cancer research,Clarke studies how hormones (endogenous and exogenous) and related factors affect breast cancer. He has authored over 340 publications, [2] and has 5 patents awarded. His research primarily focuses on determining an individual patient’s prognosis and the likelihood that they will respond to specific systemic therapies. His laboratory also studies drug resistance and the role of cell-cell communication in affecting dormancy and responsiveness to endocrine therapies breast cancers that express the estrogen receptor. [3]
Clarke is an elected Fellow of American Association for the Advancement of Science, [4] the Royal Society of Chemistry,the Royal Society of Medicine,and the Royal Society of Biology. He is a Senior Editor for the journal Cancer Research. [5]
Clarke studied at the University of Ulster,and received his bachelor's degree in biological sciences in 1980. He then enrolled at Queen’s University of Belfast,and earned a M.Sc. in 1982,a Ph.D. in 1986,and a D.Sc. in 1999 (each in biochemistry). He completed his postdoctoral training at the Medical Breast Section of the National Cancer Institute in 1988. [1]
Following his postdoctoral training,Clarke joined Georgetown University School of Medicine as an assistant professor of physiology and biophysics,and was promoted to associate professor of oncology in 1995,and to professor in 1999. In 2020,he held an appointment at Georgetown University as an adjunct professor of oncology. [1]
Clarke also held several administrative appointments in his career. He served as secretary/treasurer of the Georgetown University Senate from 2004 till 2007,as associate vice president of GUMC and director of Biomedical Graduate Research Organization from 2007 till 2019,as co-leader of Breast Cancer Program 2006 till 2020,and as dean for research 2011 till 2019 at Georgetown University. Since 2020 he serves as executive director of The Hormel Institute,University of Minnesota. [1]
Clarke's work is focused on how hormones (endogenous and exogenous) and related factors affect breast cancer. He initially focused on the interactions of hormones and anticancer drugs,and then expanded the work into studies of the underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms that explain how breast cancers become resistant to hormone and cytotoxic therapies. He and his colleagues have developed a series of hormone resistant breast cancer models that are now used in the field. [6] [7] [8]
Clarke’s research team and collaborators discovered a new signaling network and control mechanism that contributes to the hormonal regulation of breast cancer cell proliferation and cell death in response to estrogens, [9] [10] aromatase inhibitors,and antiestrogens [11] This signaling includes communication between the endoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria,and reflects novel interactions within the unfolded protein response. His group has also identified interferon regulatory factor-1 as a breast cancer suppressor gene, [12] [13] and worked on the development and application of genomic and novel bioinformatic methods in translational breast cancer studies [14] [15]
Clarke identified some of the first non-nuclear activities of endocrine therapies including the effects of Tamoxifen and high dose estrogens on membrane fluidity. [16] In his studies regarding drug resistance and MDR1/P-glycoprotein, [17] he published the first statistical meta-analysis of the role of MDR1 in breast cancer, [18] and defined novel mechanisms of resistance to Taxanes. [19] [20] He was among the pioneers to implicate the unfolded protein response (UPR) in acquired endocrine resistance [10] [21] and in regulating involution in the normal mammary gland. [22] In addition,his research team was among the first to implicate key BCL2 family members,interferon regulatory factor-1 and NFκB in the endocrine resistant phenotype, [21] and to define basic interactions among the UPR,autophagy and apoptosis, [23] regulation of immune markers, [24] and the role for epigenetic changes in terms of determining trans-generational effects on endocrine responsiveness. [25]
In his studies on the endocrine-mediated regulation of breast cancer progression and cell fate,he explored the concept that the final cell-fate decision is based on integrated signaling that flows through the endoplasmic reticulum,mitochondria and nucleus. Together,this signaling is represented in a modular network that regulates and executes five key cell function modules (autophagy,cell death,metabolism,proliferation,and UPR). [9] [10] [26]
Selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs),also known as estrogen receptor agonist/antagonists (ERAAs),are a class of drugs that act on the estrogen receptor (ER). A characteristic that distinguishes these substances from pure ER agonists and antagonists is that their action is different in various tissues,thereby granting the possibility to selectively inhibit or stimulate estrogen-like action in various tissues.
Tamoxifen,sold under the brand name Nolvadex among others,is a selective estrogen receptor modulator used to prevent breast cancer in women and men. It is also being studied for other types of cancer. It has been used for Albright syndrome. Tamoxifen is typically taken daily by mouth for five years for breast cancer.
Estrogen receptors (ERs) are a group of proteins found inside cells. They are receptors that are activated by the hormone estrogen (17β-estradiol). Two classes of ER exist:nuclear estrogen receptors,which are members of the nuclear receptor family of intracellular receptors,and membrane estrogen receptors (mERs),which are mostly G protein-coupled receptors. This article refers to the former (ER).
Proline-,glutamic acid- and leucine-rich protein 1 (PELP1) also known as modulator of non-genomic activity of estrogen receptor (MNAR) and transcription factor HMX3 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the PELP1 gene. is a transcriptional corepressor for nuclear receptors such as glucocorticoid receptors and a coactivator for estrogen receptors.
Virgil Craig Jordan,,is a scientist with American and British citizenship specializing in drugs for breast cancer treatment and prevention. Currently,he is Professor of Breast Medical Oncology,and Professor of Molecular and Cellular Oncology at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center,Houston,Texas. Previously,he was Scientific Director and Vice Chairman of Oncology at the Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center of Georgetown University. Jordan was the first to discover the breast cancer prevention properties of tamoxifen and the scientific principles for adjuvant therapy with antihormones. More recently his work has branched out into the prevention of multiple diseases in women with the discovery of the drug group,selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERMs). Currently,he plans to develop a new Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) for post-menopausal women that prevents breast cancer and does not increase the risk of breast cancer.
Hormonal therapy in oncology is hormone therapy for cancer and is one of the major modalities of medical oncology,others being cytotoxic chemotherapy and targeted therapy (biotherapeutics). It involves the manipulation of the endocrine system through exogenous or external administration of specific hormones,particularly steroid hormones,or drugs which inhibit the production or activity of such hormones. Because steroid hormones are powerful drivers of gene expression in certain cancer cells,changing the levels or activity of certain hormones can cause certain cancers to cease growing,or even undergo cell death. Surgical removal of endocrine organs,such as orchiectomy and oophorectomy can also be employed as a form of hormonal therapy.
The nuclear receptor coactivator 3 also known as NCOA3 is a protein that,in humans,is encoded by the NCOA3 gene. NCOA3 is also frequently called 'amplified in breast 1' (AIB1),steroid receptor coactivator-3 (SRC-3),or thyroid hormone receptor activator molecule 1 (TRAM-1).
Antiestrogens,also known as estrogen antagonists or estrogen blockers,are a class of drugs which prevent estrogens like estradiol from mediating their biological effects in the body. They act by blocking the estrogen receptor (ER) and/or inhibiting or suppressing estrogen production. Antiestrogens are one of three types of sex hormone antagonists,the others being antiandrogens and antiprogestogens. Antiestrogens are commonly used to stop steroid hormones,estrogen,from binding to the estrogen receptors leading to the decrease of estrogen levels. Decreased levels of estrogen can lead to complications in sexual development. Antiandrogens are sex hormone antagonists which are able to lower the production and the effects that testosterone can have on female bodies.
Breast cancer anti-estrogen resistance protein 3 is a protein that in humans is encoded by the BCAR3 gene.
Antineoplastic resistance,often used interchangeably with chemotherapy resistance,is the resistance of neoplastic (cancerous) cells,or the ability of cancer cells to survive and grow despite anti-cancer therapies. In some cases,cancers can evolve resistance to multiple drugs,called multiple drug resistance.
Triphenylethylene (TPE) is a simple aromatic hydrocarbon that possesses weak estrogenic activity. Its estrogenic effects were discovered in 1937. TPE was derived from structural modification of the more potent estrogen diethylstilbestrol,which is a member of the stilbestrol group of nonsteroidal estrogens.
Ethamoxytriphetol is a synthetic nonsteroidal antiestrogen that was studied clinically in the late 1950s and early 1960s but was never marketed. MER-25 was first reported in 1958,and was the first antiestrogen to be discovered. It has been described as "essentially devoid of estrogenic activity" and as having "very low estrogenic activity in all species tested". However,some estrogenic effects in the uterus have been observed,so it is not a pure antiestrogen but is,instead,technically a selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM). For all intents and purposes,it is a nearly pure antiestrogen,however.
Estrogen deprivation therapy,also known as endocrine therapy,is a form of hormone therapy that is used in the treatment of breast cancer. Modalities include antiestrogens or estrogen blockers such as selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) like tamoxifen,selective estrogen receptor degraders like fulvestrant,and aromatase inhibitors like anastrozole and ovariectomy.
Etacstil is an orally active,nonsteroidal,combined selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) and selective estrogen receptor degrader (SERD) that was developed for the treatment of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. It was shown to overcome antiestrogen resistance in breast cancer by altering the shape of the estrogen receptor,thus exhibiting SERD properties. Etacstil is a tamoxifen derivative and one of the first drugs to overcome tamoxifen-resistance. It is the predecessor of GW-7604,of which etacstil is a prodrug. This is analogous to the case of tamoxifen being a prodrug of afimoxifene (4-hydroxytamoxifen).
Endoxifen,also known as 4-hydroxy-N-desmethyltamoxifen,is a nonsteroidal selective estrogen receptor modulator (SERM) of the triphenylethylene group as well as a protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitor. It is under development for the treatment of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer and for the treatment of mania in bipolar disorder. It is taken by mouth.
A hormone-sensitive cancer,or hormone-dependent cancer,is a type of cancer that is dependent on a hormone for growth and/or survival. Examples include breast cancer,which is dependent on estrogens like estradiol,and prostate cancer,which is dependent on androgens like testosterone.
John Albert Katzenellenbogen is an American Professor of Chemistry at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. He studies the development of novel agents for the treatment of hormone-responsive and non-responsive breast and prostate cancers and the design of estrogens and antiestrogens that have a favorable balance of beneficial versus detrimental effects.
Benita S. Katzenellenbogen née Schulman is an American physiologist and cell biologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She has studied cancer,endocrinology,and women's health,focusing on nuclear receptors. She also dedicated efforts to focusing on improving the effectiveness of endocrine therapies in breast cancer.
ERX-11,also known as ERαcoregulator-binding modulator-11,is a novel antiestrogen and experimental hormonal antineoplastic agent which is being researched for the potential treatment of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancer. It is not a competitive antagonist of the estrogen receptor (ER) like conventional antiestrogens such as tamoxifen or fulvestrant;instead of binding to the ligand-binding site of the ER,ERX-11 interacts with a different part of the ERαand blocks protein–protein interactions of the ERαwith coregulators that are necessary for the receptor to act and regulate gene expression. It was designed to bind to the coregulator binding region of the ERαand inhibit the ERα/coactivator interaction,although its precise binding site and mode of action have yet to be fully elucidated and understood. Nonetheless,it is clear that ERX-11 binds within the AF-2 domain of the ERα.
Endocrine therapy is a common treatment for estrogen receptor positive breast cancer. However,resistance to this therapy can develop,leading to relapse and progression of disease. This highlights the need for new strategies to combat this resistance.