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Increasing DNA repair capacity in bone marrow by gene transfer as a prospective tool in cancer therapy.

Kleibl, K
Margison, Geoffrey P
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Abstract
Resistance of tumor cells to alkylating anticancer agents that produce adducts at the O6 position of guanine in DNA, the O6-alkylating agents, correlates with the expression of O6-alkylguanine-DNA alkyltransferase (ATase). O6-benzylguanine and related pseudosubstrates are able to inactivate human ATase in vitro and in vivo and they are being tested as chemotherapeutic adjuvants for enhancing the effectiveness of O6-alkylating drugs. On the other hand, the clinical consequences of ATase depletion may be fatal for some sensitive systems e.g. hematopoiesis. To overcome this problem, strategies for the protection of primary bone marrow cells by targeted transfer of pseudosubstrate-resistant ATase genes have been considered and recently achieved at the laboratory level. This approach could therefore be now extended to a clinical cancer gene therapy program.
Description
Date
1998
Publisher
Keywords
Cancer Drug Resistance
Haematopoiesis
Haematopoietic Stem Cells
Cancer Proteins
Cancer
Type
Article
Citation
Increasing DNA repair capacity in bone marrow by gene transfer as a prospective tool in cancer therapy. 1998, 45 (4):181-6 Neoplasma
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