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Translational approaches targeting the p53 pathway for anti-cancer therapy

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 165, Issue 2, Pages 328-344

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1476-5381.2011.01570.x

Keywords

anti-cancer therapy; apoptosis; MDM2; MDMX; MI-219; Nutlin; p53; p73; RITA; senescence; small molecule drugs

Funding

  1. Deutsche schungsgemeinschaft [GRK 1302, SFB 685, SFB 773]
  2. Deutsche Krehshilfe
  3. BMBF (AID-Net)
  4. Fortune program

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The p53 tumour suppressor blocks cancer development by triggering apoptosis or cellular senescence in response to oncogenic stress or DNA damage. Consequently, the p53 signalling pathway is virtually always inactivated in human cancer cells. This unifying feature has commenced tremendous efforts to develop p53-based anti-cancer therapies. Different strategies exist that are adapted to the mechanisms of p53 inactivation. In p53-mutated tumours, delivery of wild-type p53 by adenovirus-based gene therapy is now practised in China. Also, remarkable progress has been made in the development of p53-binding drugs that can rescue and reactivate the function of mutant or misfolded p53. Other biologic approaches include the development of oncolytic viruses that are designed to specifically replicate in and kill p53-defective cells. Inactivation of wt-p53 frequently results from dysregulation of MDM2, an E3 ligase that regulates p53 levels. Small-molecule drugs that inhibit the interaction of MDM2 and p53 and block p53 degradation are currently tested in clinical trials. This survey highlights the recent developments that attempt to modulate the function of p53 and outlines strategies that are being investigated for pharmacological intervention in the p53 pathway.

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