Volume 1 • Issue 6 • 1000e130 Biochem Pharmacol ISSN:2167-0501 BCPC, an open access journal Editorial Open Access Shah et al., Biochem Pharmacol 2012, 1:6 DOI: 10.4172/2167-0501.1000e130 Cancer afects a signifcant proportion of the population of the United States and the rest of the world. In the U.S. approximately 12 million people were directly afected by cancer in 2010 [1]. In a signifcant percentage of these patients, the disease will become invasive and may eventually be the primary cause of death. Classical treatment of cancer involves surgery, radiation and chemotherapy. However, chemo and radiation therapies cause more harm rather than help in the long run as it is becoming evident that radiation/chemo therapies induce mutations that could transform the tumor into a drug-resistant and metastatic cancer [2-4]. Recent advances in cancer biology provide a hope for the development of novel, personalized and targeted therapy for cancer patients. Among many new directions of research in cancer, the understanding of the mechanisms that transform a localized tumor into an invasive one is the most exciting. Although cancer is frequently considered as a disease of abnormal proliferation and accelerated abnormal growth, cancer progression is not determined solely by proliferative advantage of malignant cells within a tumor [5]. Other factors such as resistance to apoptosis and ability to bypass senescence pathways also contribute signifcantly to the process [6]. Correct adhesion between adjacent epithelial cells is important in determining the normal structure and function of epithelial tissues [7]. Accumulating evidence suggests that dysregulated cell-cell adhesion is associated with development and progression of most epithelial cancers [8]. Cell-cell adhesion is a critical component for the assembly of coherent sheets of barrier-forming epithelial cells that eventually line most organs, ducts and lobules. However, it is now understood that cell-cell contacts are not static structures that maintain barriers by just holding cells together. Tese contacts undergo constant remodeling to allow extrusion of apoptotic cells and to replace them with newly formed epithelial cells without the loss of barrier function. Cell-cell contacts are also remodeled to meet special physiological and developmental needs such as puberty, pregnancy, lactation, or involution. During wound healing, epithelial cells undergo coordinated movement and proliferation to bridge the wound, and establish new cell-cell contacts with epithelial cells from the opposing side of the wound [9-11]. Epithelial cell-cell contacts consist of three main adhesive structures: tight junctions (TJs), adherens junctions and desmosomes, as well as gap junctions. In polarized epithelial cells the TJs and adherens junctions are asymmetrically distributed at the apical region of the lateral membrane. Tis asymmetry forms the apical junctional complex, which encircles the apex of the cells and marks the border between apical and basolateral membrane domains [9,12]. Tese adhesive structures are composed of integral transmembrane proteins such as claudins or occludin that link the neighboring cells through homophilic and heterophilic interactions. Tese transmembrane proteins are anchored to cytoskeleton by zonula occludens proteins, which also organize signaling complexes and anchor cell-cell contacts to the actin cytoskeleton [13,14]. Especially, zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1) plays a key role in organizing TJs by serving as a scafold and providing multiple interaction domains where several transmembrane and signaling proteins can bind to form the TJ structure [13,15,16]. As the most apical structure between epithelial and endothelial cells, TJs control paracellular difusion of ions and certain molecules [17]. In addition, TJs play a vital role in maintaining cell to cell integrity and cohesion of the organ lining [18]. Te loss of cohesion between tight junctions could lead to dysplastic changes, which may eventually transform into cancer [19]. It must be noted that a relationship between TJ proteins and epithelial cancers is complex. An intact and functional TJ complex acts as a barrier to the initiation and progression of epithelial cancers by regulating important processes such as cell polarity, cell fate and cell movement. However, any imbalance in the protein components of this complex (whether increased or decreased) might disrupt the homeostatic control required to maintain the tissue in its diferentiated state. Te imbalance can also alter cell-cell and cell-extracellular matrix interactions, and cause disordered organ lining that makes cells chronically leaky to mitogens and growth factors. Together, these events can promote cancer formation in premalignant epithelial tissues [7]. Disruptive changes in TJ complex can also alter cell adhesion, free tumor cells from both neighboring cells and the underlying matrix; and confer onto them a migratory or invasive characteristics [20]. Te role of individual TJ proteins in this process is suggested by the following few examples from a large body of evidence. Te role of claudin-1 in the control of cell fate is indicated by increased expression in senescent epithelial cells and reduced expression in invasive cancers [21]. Decreased ZO-1 expression correlates with decreased glandular diferentiation of breast tumor specimens [22]. ZO-1 and ZO-2 also regulate cell cycle progression and proliferation in a cell density- dependent manner through transcription factors such as ZONAB [23]. A large majority of cancers afecting elderly population are epithelial, and display dysregulated cell-cell adhesion. With better understanding of the factors and mechanisms involved in dysregulated cell-cell adhesion, it is becoming apparent that therapies specifcally directed at restoring normal TJ function might be benefcial in halting the progression of epithelial tumors and in restoring normal cell-cell adhesion patterns. Unfortunately, the delivery of the TJ-targeting therapeutic agents to the site of action can pose a major problem. Te agent must traverse epithelial and/or endothelial barriers to reach the site of action. Since the TJ is the primary regulator of paracellular transport across such cells, successful drug delivery may require modulation of TJ proteins to allow drug molecules to pass *Corresponding author: Girish V Shah, Department of Pharmacology, University of Louisiana, Monroe, LA 71291, USA, E-Mail: shah@ulm.edu Received August 17, 2012; Accepted August 20, 2012; Published August 23, 2012 Citation: Shah GV (2012) Restoration of Tight-Junction Function: A New Therapeutic Approach for the Treatment of Cancer. Biochem Pharmacol 1:e130. doi:10.4172/2167-0501.1000e130 Copyright: © 2012 Shah GV, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. Restoration of Tight-Junction Function: A New Therapeutic Approach for the Treatment of Cancer Girish V Shah* Department of Pharmacology, University of Louisiana, Monroe, LA 71291, USA B i o c h e m i s t r y & P h a r m a c o l o g y : O p e n A c c e s s ISSN: 2167-0501 Biochemistry & Pharmacology: Open Access