| Literature DB >> 28097822 |
Nicola Thompson1, David J Adams1, Marco Ranzani1.
Abstract
Great progress has been made in the treatment of melanoma through use of targeted therapies and immunotherapy. One approach that has not been fully explored is synthetic lethality, which exploits somatically acquired changes, usually driver mutations, to specifically kill tumour cells. We outline the various approaches that may be applied to identify synthetic lethal interactions and define how these interactions may drive drug discovery efforts.Entities:
Keywords: CRISPR; melanoma genomics; preclinical models; synthetic lethality; therapeutic target
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28097822 PMCID: PMC5396340 DOI: 10.1111/pcmr.12573
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pigment Cell Melanoma Res ISSN: 1755-1471 Impact factor: 4.693
Figure 1The concept of using synthetic lethality as a therapeutic strategy in cancer. (A) Synthetic lethality: The loss of gene A or gene B in isolation is compatible with cellular viability, whereas loss of both genes together leads to cellular lethality. A normal cell therefore would be able to tolerate inhibition of gene A, whilst for a tumour cell that has already lost the function of gene B, inhibition of gene A is lethal. (B) Synthetic dose lethality: Overexpression or overactivation of gene B leads to cellular dependence on gene A. Whilst normal cells are able to tolerate inhibition of gene A, in tumour cells that overexpress gene B, inhibition of gene A is lethal. Key: regular circle – non‐malignant cell; irregular circle – tumour cell; red cells are those with a complement of mutations incompatible with viability; tablet – drug inhibition; cross – loss of gene function; thickened arrow – gene over‐expression; lightning bolt – gene mutation.
Summary of common synthetic lethal screening approaches and their advantages and limitations
| Synthetic lethal screening method | Advantage | Disadvantage |
|---|---|---|
| Yeast screens |
Simple genome and easy genetic manipulation |
Inability to reflect the complexity of the mammalian/cancer genome |
| Drug screens |
Easily translated to clinical practice |
Variable drug specificity Drug target sometimes unknown Limited to ‘druggable’ genes |
| RNAi screens |
May be transcript specific Ability to target any gene within the genome Possibility of being performed in vivo |
Difficult to achieve complete gene knockdown Potential toxicity of siRNA knockdown Less specific than CRISPR (off‐targets) |
| CRISPR screens |
Possibility of achieving complete genetic knockout Ability to target both transcribed and untranscribed regions Possibility of being performed in vivo |
Off‐target effects Possibility of poor guide efficiency at inducing knockout Failure of gene knockout to recapitulate drug inhibition of the target |
| Bioinformatic approaches |
Able to utilize data from a wide range of sources, both from experiments and sequencing data |
Generates long lists of potential SL pairs requiring extensive experimental validation |