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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of Myc family proteins eradicates KRas-driven lung cancer in mice

TLDR
It is demonstrated that metronomic Myc inhibition not only contains Ras-driven lung tumors indefinitely, but also leads to their progressive eradication, endorsing Myc as a compelling cancer drug target.
Abstract
The principal reason for failure of targeted cancer therapies is the emergence of resistant clones that regenerate the tumor. Therapeutic efficacy therefore depends on not only how effectively a drug inhibits its target, but also the innate or adaptive functional redundancy of that target and its attendant pathway. In this regard, the Myc transcription factors are intriguing therapeutic targets because they serve the unique and irreplaceable role of coordinating expression of the many diverse genes that, together, are required for somatic cell proliferation. Furthermore, Myc expression is deregulated in most—perhaps all—cancers, underscoring its irreplaceable role in proliferation. We previously showed in a preclinical mouse model of non-small-cell lung cancer that systemic Myc inhibition using the dominant-negative Myc mutant Omomyc exerts a dramatic therapeutic impact, triggering rapid regression of tumors with only mild and fully reversible side effects. Using protracted episodic expression of Omomyc, we now demonstrate that metronomic Myc inhibition not only contains Ras-driven lung tumors indefinitely, but also leads to their progressive eradication. Hence, Myc does indeed serve a unique and nondegenerate role in lung tumor maintenance that cannot be complemented by any adaptive mechanism, even in the most aggressive p53-deficient tumors. These data endorse Myc as a compelling cancer drug target.

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Non-small-cell lung cancers: a heterogeneous set of diseases

TL;DR: An impressive list of potential therapeutic targets was unveiled, drastically altering the clinical evaluation and treatment of patients for non-small-cell lung cancers, including immunotherapy.
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MYC, Metabolism, and Cancer

TL;DR: Because of the reliance of MYC-driven cancers on specific metabolic pathways, synthetic lethal interactions between MYC overexpression and specific enzyme inhibitors provide novel cancer therapeutic opportunities.
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The current state and future directions of RNAi-based therapeutics.

TL;DR: This Review discusses key advances in the design and development of RNAi drugs leading up to this landmark achievement, the state of the current clinical pipeline and prospects for future advances, including novel RNAi pathway agents utilizing mechanisms beyond post-translational RNAi silencing.
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Transcriptional Addiction in Cancer

TL;DR: How transcriptional control is disrupted by genetic alterations in cancer cells, why transcriptional dependencies can develop as a consequence of dysregulated programs, and how these dependencies provide opportunities for novel therapeutic interventions in cancer are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

MYC Activation Is a Hallmark of Cancer Initiation and Maintenance

TL;DR: Tumors appear to be "addicted" to MYC because of both tumor cell-intrinsic, cell-autonomous and host-dependent, immune cell-dependent mechanisms.
References
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Peroxisome Proliferator Activated Receptor α Ligands as Anticancer Drugs Targeting Mitochondrial Metabolism

TL;DR: PPAR α activation can engage molecular interplay among SIRT1, AMPK, and PGC-1α that provides a new, low toxicity dietary approach supplementing traditional anticancer regimen.
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