1. Paralog-based synthetic lethality: rationales and applications.
- Author
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Yucui Xin and Yingsheng Zhang
- Subjects
HIGH throughput screening (Drug development) ,GENETIC mutation ,CELL survival ,CANCER cells ,GENE targeting ,CHROMOSOME duplication - Abstract
Tumor cells can result from gene mutations and over-expression. Synthetic lethality (SL) offers a desirable setting where cancer cells bearing one mutated gene of an SL gene pair can be specifically targeted by disrupting the function of the other genes, while leaving wide-type normal cells unharmed. Paralogs, a set of homologous genes that have diverged from each other as a consequence of gene duplication, make the concept of SL feasible as the loss of one gene does not affect the cell's survival. Furthermore, homozygous loss of paralogs in tumor cells is more frequent than singletons, making them ideal SL targets. Although high-throughput CRISPR-Cas9 screenings have uncovered numerous paralogbased SL pairs, the unclear mechanisms of targeting these gene pairs and the difficulty in finding specific inhibitors that exclusively target a single but not both paralogs hinder further clinical development. Here, we review the potential mechanisms of paralog-based SL given their function and genetic combination, and discuss the challenge and application prospects of paralogbased SL in cancer therapeutic discovery. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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