Author
Kulkarni, SanatBrownlie, Juliette
Jeyapalan, Jennie N
Mongan, Nigel P
Rakha, Emad A
Madhusudan, Srinivasan
Affiliation
University of Nottingham; Nottingham University Hospitals; Sandwell and West Birmingham NHS TrustPublication date
2022-12Subject
Practice of medicine
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
DNA damage signaling response and repair (DDR) is a critical defense mechanism against genomic instability. Impaired DNA repair capacity is an important risk factor for cancer development. On the other hand, up-regulation of DDR mechanisms is a feature of cancer chemotherapy and radiotherapy resistance. Advances in our understanding of DDR and its complex role in cancer has led to several translational DNA repair-targeted investigations culminating in clinically viable precision oncology strategy using poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors in breast, ovarian, pancreatic, and prostate cancers. While PARP directed synthetic lethality has improved outcomes for many patients, the lack of sustained clinical response and the development of resistance pose significant clinical challenges. Therefore, the search for additional DDR-directed drug targets and novel synthetic lethality approaches is highly desirable and is an area of intense preclinical and clinical investigation. Here, we provide an overview of the mammalian DNA repair pathways and then focus on current state of PARP inhibitors (PARPi) and other emerging DNA repair inhibitors for synthetic lethality in cancer.Citation
Kulkarni, S., Brownlie, J., Jeyapalan, J. N., Mongan, N. P., Rakha, E. A., & Madhusudan, S. (2022). Evolving DNA repair synthetic lethality targets in cancer. Bioscience reports, 42(12), BSR20221713. https://doi.org/10.1042/BSR20221713Type
ArticlePMID
36420962Journal
Bioscience ReportsPublisher
Portland Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1042/BSR20221713