4.4 Review

Small-molecule inhibitors of proteins involved in base excision repair potentiate the anti-tumorigenic effect of existing chemotherapeutics and irradiation

期刊

FUTURE ONCOLOGY
卷 5, 期 5, 页码 713-726

出版社

FUTURE MEDICINE LTD
DOI: 10.2217/FON.09.31

关键词

Ape1 inhibitor; base excision repair; biomarkers; BRCA1; BRCA2; DNA polymerase beta inhibitor; PARP inhibitor

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资金

  1. National Institutes of Health
  2. National Cancer Institute [CA122298, CA94025, CA106298, CA114571, CA121168]
  3. IU Simon Cancer Center Translational initiative pilot
  4. Riley Children's Foundation

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There has been a recent upsurge in the development of small-molecule inhibitors specific to DNA repair proteins or proteins peripherally involved in base excision repair and the DNA damage response. These specific, nominally toxic inhibitors are able to potentiate the effect of existing cancer cell treatments in a wide array of cancers. One of the largest obstacles to overcome in the treatment of cancer is incomplete killing with initial cancer treatments, leading to resistant cancer. The progression of our understanding of cancer and normal cell responses to DNA damage has allowed us to develop biomarkers that we can use to help us predict responses of cancers, more specifically target cancer cells and overcome resistance. Initial successes using these small-molecule DNA repair inhibitors in target-validation experiments and in the early stages of clinical trials indicate an important role for these inhibitors, and allow for the possibility of a future in which cancers are potentially treated in a highly specific, individual manner.

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