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Selective Killing of Cancer Cells Based on Loss of Heterozygosity and Normal Variation in the Human Genome: A New Paradigm for Anticancer Drug Therapy
Most drugs for cancer therapy are targeted to relative differences in the biological characteristics of cancer cells and normal cells. The therapeutic index of such drugs is theoretically limited by the magnitude of such differences, and most anticancer drugs have considerable toxicity to normal cel...
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Published in: | Molecular pharmacology 1999-08, Vol.56 (2), p.359-369 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Most drugs for cancer therapy are targeted to relative differences in the biological characteristics of cancer cells and normal
cells. The therapeutic index of such drugs is theoretically limited by the magnitude of such differences, and most anticancer
drugs have considerable toxicity to normal cells. Here we describe a new approach for developing anticancer drugs. This approach,
termed variagenic targeting, exploits the absolute difference in the genotype of normal cells and cancer cells arising from
normal gene sequence variation in essential genes and loss of heterozygosity (LOH) occurring during oncogenesis. The technology
involves identifying genes that are: 1) essential for cell survival; 2) are expressed as multiple alleles in the normal population
because of the presence of one or more nucleotide polymorphisms; and 3) are frequently subject to LOH in several common cancers.
An allele-specific drug inhibiting the essential gene remaining in cancer cells would be lethal to the malignant cell and
would have minimal toxicity to the normal heterozygous cell that retains the drug-insensitive allele. With antisense oligonucleotides
designed to target two alternative alleles of replication protein A, 70-kDa subunit (RPA70) we demonstrate in vitro selective
killing of cancer cells that contain only the sensitive allele of the target gene without killing cells expressing the alternative
RPA70 allele. Additionally, we identify several other candidate genes for variagenic targeting. This technology represents
a new approach for the discovery of agents with high therapeutics indices for treating cancer and other proliferative disorders. |
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ISSN: | 0026-895X 1521-0111 |
DOI: | 10.1124/mol.56.2.359 |