Title of article
Targeting the RAF–MEK–ERK pathway in cancer therapy
Author/Authors
Montagut، نويسنده , , Clara and Settleman، نويسنده , , Jeff، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Pages
10
From page
125
To page
134
Abstract
The clinical success of selective kinase inhibitors, such as imatinib and erlotinib, as therapeutic agents for several human cancers has prompted substantial interest in the further development and clinical testing of such inhibitors for a wide variety of malignancies. While much of this effort has been focused on the receptor tyrosine kinases, including EGFR, HER2, PDGF receptor, c-KIT, and MET, inhibitors of serine/threonine kinases are also beginning to emerge within discovery pipelines. Among these kinases, the RAF and MEK kinases have received substantial attention, owing largely to the relatively high frequency of activating mutations of RAS (∼20% of all human cancers), an upstream activator of the well established RAF–MEK–ERK signaling cascade, as well as frequent activating mutations in the BRAF kinase (∼7% of all human cancers). Here, we summarize the current state of development of kinase inhibitors directed at this signaling pathway, a few of which have already demonstrating favorable toxicity profiles as well as promising activity in early phase clinical studies.
Keywords
MEK kinase , Raf kinase , Selective kinase inhibitors , CANCER
Journal title
Cancer Letters
Serial Year
2009
Journal title
Cancer Letters
Record number
1817697
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