Inhibitors of DNA Glycosylases as Prospective Drugs.
DNA glycosylases are enzymes that initiate the base excision repair pathway, a major biochemical process that protects the genomes of all living organisms from intrinsically and environmentally inflicted damage. Recently, base excision repair inhibition proved to be a viable strategy for the therapy of tumors that have lost alternative repair pathways, such as BRCA-deficient cancers sensitive to poly(ADP-ribose)polymerase inhibition. However, drugs targeting DNA glycosylases are still in development and so far have not advanced to clinical trials. In this review, we cover the attempts to validate DNA glycosylases as suitable targets for inhibition in the pharmacological treatment of cancer, neurodegenerative diseases, chronic inflammation, bacterial and viral infections. We discuss the glycosylase inhibitors described so far and survey the advances in the assays for DNA glycosylase reactions that may be used to screen pharmacological libraries for new active compounds.
Duke Scholars
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Related Subject Headings
- Virus Diseases
- Small Molecule Libraries
- Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Neoplasms
- Inflammation
- Humans
- Enzyme Inhibitors
- Drug Discovery
- DNA Repair
- DNA Glycosylases
Citation
Published In
DOI
EISSN
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- Virus Diseases
- Small Molecule Libraries
- Neurodegenerative Diseases
- Neoplasms
- Inflammation
- Humans
- Enzyme Inhibitors
- Drug Discovery
- DNA Repair
- DNA Glycosylases