Preventing damage limitation: targeting DNA-PKcs and DNA double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapy

Platinum-based chemotherapy is the cornerstone of ovarian cancer treatment, and its efficacy is dependent on the generation of DNA damage, with subsequent induction of apoptosis. Inappropriate or aberrant activation of the DNA damage response network is are associated with resistance to platinum, an...

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Main Authors: Daniela A Dungl, Elaina N Maginn, Euan Alexander Stronach
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2015-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Oncology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fonc.2015.00240/full
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spelling doaj-254619414f0748d4986d6385ca1a55ac2020-11-25T00:18:30ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Oncology2234-943X2015-10-01510.3389/fonc.2015.00240156912Preventing damage limitation: targeting DNA-PKcs and DNA double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapyDaniela A Dungl0Elaina N Maginn1Euan Alexander Stronach2Imperial College LondonImperial College LondonImperial College LondonPlatinum-based chemotherapy is the cornerstone of ovarian cancer treatment, and its efficacy is dependent on the generation of DNA damage, with subsequent induction of apoptosis. Inappropriate or aberrant activation of the DNA damage response network is are associated with resistance to platinum, and defects in DNA repair pathways play critical roles in determining patient response to chemotherapy. In ovarian cancer, tumour cell defects in homologous recombination - a repair pathway activated in response to DNA double strand breaks (DSB) - are most commonly associated with platinum sensitive disease. However, despite initial sensitivity, the emergence of resistance is frequent. Here, we review strategies for directly interfering with DNA repair pathways, with particular focus on direct inhibition of non-homologous end joining (NHEJ), another DSB repair pathway. DNA-PKcs is a core component of NHEJ and it has shown considerable promise as a chemosensitization target in numerous cancer types, including ovarian cancer where it functions to promote platinum-induced survival signalling, via AKT activation. The development of pharmacological inhibitors of DNA-PKcs is on-going, and clinic-ready agents offer real hope to patients with chemoresistant disease.http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fonc.2015.00240/fullDNA RepairDNA-PKcsovarian cancerplatinum resistancechemosensitisation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Daniela A Dungl
Elaina N Maginn
Euan Alexander Stronach
spellingShingle Daniela A Dungl
Elaina N Maginn
Euan Alexander Stronach
Preventing damage limitation: targeting DNA-PKcs and DNA double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapy
Frontiers in Oncology
DNA Repair
DNA-PKcs
ovarian cancer
platinum resistance
chemosensitisation
author_facet Daniela A Dungl
Elaina N Maginn
Euan Alexander Stronach
author_sort Daniela A Dungl
title Preventing damage limitation: targeting DNA-PKcs and DNA double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapy
title_short Preventing damage limitation: targeting DNA-PKcs and DNA double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapy
title_full Preventing damage limitation: targeting DNA-PKcs and DNA double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapy
title_fullStr Preventing damage limitation: targeting DNA-PKcs and DNA double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapy
title_full_unstemmed Preventing damage limitation: targeting DNA-PKcs and DNA double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapy
title_sort preventing damage limitation: targeting dna-pkcs and dna double strand break repair pathways for ovarian cancer therapy
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Oncology
issn 2234-943X
publishDate 2015-10-01
description Platinum-based chemotherapy is the cornerstone of ovarian cancer treatment, and its efficacy is dependent on the generation of DNA damage, with subsequent induction of apoptosis. Inappropriate or aberrant activation of the DNA damage response network is are associated with resistance to platinum, and defects in DNA repair pathways play critical roles in determining patient response to chemotherapy. In ovarian cancer, tumour cell defects in homologous recombination - a repair pathway activated in response to DNA double strand breaks (DSB) - are most commonly associated with platinum sensitive disease. However, despite initial sensitivity, the emergence of resistance is frequent. Here, we review strategies for directly interfering with DNA repair pathways, with particular focus on direct inhibition of non-homologous end joining (NHEJ), another DSB repair pathway. DNA-PKcs is a core component of NHEJ and it has shown considerable promise as a chemosensitization target in numerous cancer types, including ovarian cancer where it functions to promote platinum-induced survival signalling, via AKT activation. The development of pharmacological inhibitors of DNA-PKcs is on-going, and clinic-ready agents offer real hope to patients with chemoresistant disease.
topic DNA Repair
DNA-PKcs
ovarian cancer
platinum resistance
chemosensitisation
url http://journal.frontiersin.org/Journal/10.3389/fonc.2015.00240/full
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