Litcius/Paper detail

Targeting DNA repair pathway in cancer: Mechanisms and clinical application

Manni Wang, Siyuan Chen, Danyi Ao

2021MedComm125 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Over the last decades, the growing understanding on DNA damage response (DDR) pathways has broadened the therapeutic landscape in oncology. It is becoming increasingly clear that the genomic instability of cells resulted from deficient DNA damage response contributes to the occurrence of cancer. One the other hand, these defects could also be exploited as a therapeutic opportunity, which is preferentially more deleterious in tumor cells than in normal cells. An expanding repertoire of DDR-targeting agents has rapidly expanded to inhibitors of multiple members involved in DDR pathways, including PARP, ATM, ATR, CHK1, WEE1, and DNA-PK. In this review, we sought to summarize the complex network of DNA repair machinery in cancer cells and discuss the underlying mechanism for the application of DDR inhibitors in cancer. With the past preclinical evidence and ongoing clinical trials, we also provide an overview of the history and current landscape of DDR inhibitors in cancer treatment, with special focus on the combination of DDR-targeted therapies with other cancer treatment strategies.

Topics & Concepts

Genome instabilityDNA damageDNA repairCancerDNA Damage RepairCancer researchBiologyCancer cellWee1Synthetic lethalityMedicineDNAGeneticsCell cycleCyclin-dependent kinase 1DNA Repair MechanismsCancer therapeutics and mechanismsPARP inhibition in cancer therapy
Targeting DNA repair pathway in cancer: Mechanisms and clinical application | Litcius