Targeting ATM and ATR for cancer therapeutics: Inhibitors in clinic
Source
Drug Discovery Today
ISSN
13596446
Date Issued
2023-08-01
Author(s)
Abstract
The DNA Damage and Response (DDR) pathway ensures accurate information transfer from one generation to the next. Alterations in DDR functions have been connected to cancer predisposition, progression, and response to therapy. DNA double-strand break (DSB) is one of the most detrimental DNA defects, causing major chromosomal abnormalities such as translocations and deletions. ATR and ATM kinases recognize this damage and activate proteins involved in cell cycle checkpoint, DNA repair, and apoptosis. Cancer cells have a high DSB burden, and therefore rely on DSB repair for survival. Therefore, targeting DSB repair can sensitize cancer cells to DNA-damaging agents. This review focuses on ATM and ATR, their roles in DNA damage and repair pathways, challenges in targeting them, and inhibitors that are in current clinical trials.
Subjects
ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3 related kinase | ataxia telangiectasia mutated kinase | DNA damage and repair | double-stranded breaks | homologous recombination | inhibitors
