4.8 Review

Therapeutic targeting of splicing in cancer

Journal

NATURE MEDICINE
Volume 22, Issue 9, Pages 976-986

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nm.4165

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Edward P. Evans Foundation
  2. Department of Defense Bone Marrow Failure Research Program [BM150092, W81XWH-12-1-0041]
  3. US National Institutes of Health (NIH)-NHLBI [R01 HL128239]
  4. Josie Robertson Investigator Program
  5. Mr. William H. Goodwin and Mrs. Alice Goodwin Commonwealth Foundation for Cancer Research
  6. Experimental Therapeutics Center of MSKCC
  7. Pershing Square Sohn Cancer Research Alliance
  8. NIH [1K08CA160647-01]
  9. Damon Runyon Clinical Investigator Award
  10. Starr Foundation [I8-A8-075]

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Recent studies have highlighted that splicing patterns are frequently altered in cancer and that mutations in genes encoding spliceosomal proteins, as well as mutations affecting the splicing of key cancer-associated genes, are enriched in cancer. In parallel, there is also accumulating evidence that several molecular subtypes of cancer are highly dependent on splicing function for cell survival. These findings have resulted in a growing interest in targeting splicing catalysis, splicing regulatory proteins, and/or specific key altered splicing events in the treatment of cancer. Here we present strategies that exist and that are in development to target altered dependency on the spliceosome, as well as aberrant splicing, in cancer. These include drugs to target global splicing in cancer subtypes that are preferentially dependent on wild-type splicing for survival, methods to alter post-translational modifications of splicing-regulating proteins, and strategies to modulate pathologic splicing events and protein-RNA interactions in cancer.

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