Cancer Therapy and Replication Stress: Forks on the Road to Perdition

P. Kotsantis, R.M. Jones, M.R. Higgs, E. Petermann

Research output: Chapter in Book/Published conference outputChapter

Abstract

Deregulated DNA replication occurs in cancer where it contributes to genomic instability. This process is a target of cytotoxic therapies. Chemotherapies exploit high DNA replication in cancer cells by modifying the DNA template or by inhibiting vital enzymatic activities that lead to slowing or stalling replication fork progression. Stalled replication forks can be converted into toxic DNA double-strand breaks resulting in cell death, i.e., replication stress. While likely crucial for many cancer treatments, replication stress is poorly understood due to its complexity. While we still know relatively little about the role of replication stress in cancer therapy, technical advances in recent years have shed new light on the effect that cancer therapeutics have on replication forks and the molecular mechanisms that lead from obstructed fork progression to cell death. This chapter will give an overview of our current understanding of replication stress in the context of cancer therapy.
Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationAdvances in Clinical Chemistry
PublisherElsevier
Chapter3
Pages91-138
Number of pages47
Volume69
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 7 Feb 2015

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