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  • Targeting Mitosis in Cancer...
    Dominguez-Brauer, Carmen; Thu, Kelsie L.; Mason, Jacqueline M.; Blaser, Heiko; Bray, Mark R.; Mak, Tak W.

    Molecular cell, 11/2015, Letnik: 60, Številka: 4
    Journal Article

    The cell cycle is an evolutionarily conserved process necessary for mammalian cell growth and development. Because cell-cycle aberrations are a hallmark of cancer, this process has been the target of anti-cancer therapeutics for decades. However, despite numerous clinical trials, cell-cycle-targeting agents have generally failed in the clinic. This review briefly examines past cell-cycle-targeted therapeutics and outlines how experience with these agents has provided valuable insight to refine and improve anti-mitotic strategies. An overview of emerging anti-mitotic approaches with promising pre-clinical results is provided, and the concept of exploiting the genomic instability of tumor cells through therapeutic inhibition of mitotic checkpoints is discussed. We believe this strategy has a high likelihood of success given its potential to enhance therapeutic index by targeting tumor-specific vulnerabilities. This reasoning stimulated our development of novel inhibitors targeting the critical regulators of genomic stability and the mitotic checkpoint: AURKA, PLK4, and Mps1/TTK. Dominguez-Brauer et al. review the therapeutic potential of exploiting the genomic instability of tumor cells by inhibiting mitotic checkpoints as a strategy to selectively target tumor-specific vulnerabilities.