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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Cyclotherapy: protection of normal cells and unshielding of cancer cells.

Avoidance of apoptosis and mitogen-independent growth are hallmarks of cancer. Mitogen-activated kinases (for example, ErbB1, Raf-1, MEK, PI-3-K, mTOR) can suppress chemotherapy-induced apoptosis in cancer cells. While kinase inhibitors restore susceptibility of cancer cells to apoptosis, they do not necessarily cause growth arrest in cancer cells harboring additional mutations in downstream signaling pathways such as inactivation of Rb and overexpression of c-myc. This article provides a conceptual basis for a novel use of inhibitors of mitogenic kinases. While arresting growth of normal cells, kinase inhibitors may not arrest cancer cells but instead can sensitize them to apoptosis. Following pretreatment with low doses of kinase inhibitors, the chemotherapy that predominantly induces apoptosis in cycling cells (cyclotherapy) will kill cancer cells while sparing normal cells.[1]

References

  1. Cyclotherapy: protection of normal cells and unshielding of cancer cells. Blagosklonny, M.V., Darzynkiewicz, Z. Cell Cycle (2002) [Pubmed]
 
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