Targeting ATR as Cancer Therapy: A new era for synthetic lethality and synergistic combinations?

Publication date: Available online 11 December 2019Source: Pharmacology & TherapeuticsAuthor(s): Alice Bradbury, Sally Hall, Nicola Curtin, Yvette DrewAbstractThe DNA damage response (DDR) machinery is responsible for detecting DNA damage, pausing the cell cycle and initiating DNA repair. Ataxia telangiectasia and Rad3-related (ATR) protein is a key kinase at the heart of the DDR, responsible for sensing replication stress (RS) and signalling it to S and G2/M checkpoints to facilitate repair. In cancer, loss of G1 checkpoint control and activation of oncogenes that drive replication, result in cancer cells more likely to enter S phase with increased RS. These cancer cells become more reliant on their S and G2/M checkpoints, making this an attractive anti-cancer target. Targeting ATR is the focus of many oncology drug pipelines with a number of potent, selective ATR inhibitors developed, four (M6620, M4344, AZD6738 and BAY1895344) are currently in clinical development. Here we summarise the pre-clinical data supporting the use of ATR inhibitors as monotherapy and in combination with chemotherapy, radiotherapy and novel targeted agents such as PARP inhibitors. We discuss the current clinical trial data and the challenges of taking ATR inhibitors into the clinic and of identifying biomarkers to aid patient selection.
Source: Pharmacology and Therapeutics - Category: Drugs & Pharmacology Source Type: research