Drugging DNA Damage Response & Repair: A Layered Therapeutic Approach for Cancer Treatment
Monday April 08, 2019
8:00 am
-
10:00 am
Eastern Time (ET)
Room W205 A
DCP
DDD
MP
TCP
Chair :
Robert van Waardenburg
University of Alabama at Birmingham
DNA damage response and repair pathways are at the forefront of molecularly-targeted therapeutic strategies, as tumor-induced defects in DNA repair or checkpoint signaling can be exploited by selective targeting of other repair pathways. This is exemplified by successful targeting of PARP1/2, Chk1/Wee1, and ATM/ATR, as well as additional drug development efforts focused on DNA repair. This symposium highlights resurgent interests in selective targeting of these survival pathways, and how these efforts may be exploited to augment current cancer therapy, topics which are timely and of significant impact in the fields of cancer pharmacology, drug discovery and drug development.
Speakers
Robert Godin
- AstraZeneca
WEE1-Inhibitor Adavosertib (AZD1775) in Clinical Trials
Judith Campbell
- California Institute of Technology
DNA2 Nuclease-helicase Inhibitor, Targeting the Achilles Heel of Cancer Cells
Maria Speis
- University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine
The RAD52-ssDNA Interaction Inhibition: Targeting DNA Replication and Repair Interface in BRCA-deficient Cancers
Robert van Waardenburg
- University of Alabama at Birmingham
Turning the DNA Repair Protein TDP1 into a Cellular Poison as a Potential Strategy for Cancer Treatment