Litcius/Paper detail

Harnessing DNA Replication Stress for Novel Cancer Therapy

Huanbo Zhu, Umang Swami, Ranjan Preet, Jun Zhang

2020Genes51 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

DNA replication is the fundamental process for accurate duplication and transfer of genetic information. Its fidelity is under constant stress from endogenous and exogenous factors which can cause perturbations that lead to DNA damage and defective replication. This can compromise genomic stability and integrity. Genomic instability is considered as one of the hallmarks of cancer. In normal cells, various checkpoints could either activate DNA repair or induce cell death/senescence. Cancer cells on the other hand potentiate DNA replicative stress, due to defective DNA damage repair mechanism and unchecked growth signaling. Though replicative stress can lead to mutagenesis and tumorigenesis, it can be harnessed paradoxically for cancer treatment. Herein, we review the mechanism and rationale to exploit replication stress for cancer therapy. We discuss both established and new approaches targeting DNA replication stress including chemotherapy, radiation, and small molecule inhibitors targeting pathways including ATR, Chk1, PARP, WEE1, MELK, NAE, TLK etc. Finally, we review combination treatments, biomarkers, and we suggest potential novel methods to target DNA replication stress to treat cancer.

Topics & Concepts

Genome instabilityDNA damageDNA re-replicationBiologyDNA repairMutagenesisCarcinogenesisDNA replicationCancerCancer cellCancer researchDNACell biologyEukaryotic DNA replicationGeneticsMutationGeneDNA Repair MechanismsPARP inhibition in cancer therapyCancer therapeutics and mechanisms