11:56 AM - 12:10 PM
[WS4-10] Targeting the BCL-2-regulated cell death pathway for the treatment of cancer
Many cancers remain resistant to currently available treatments, hence, require urgent research. The unwarranted survival of cancer cells is often due to their ability to escape self-destruction by apoptotic cell death regulated by the BCL-2 protein family. Anti-cancer therapeutics known as “BH3-mimetics” influence cancer cell survival by antagonising the pro-survival members of the BCL-2 family. One such drug, Venetoclax, is now used in the clinic for the treatment of some blood cancers, whilst others are in clinical trials or pre-clinical testing.
Our research focusses on the application of BH3-mimetics for the treatment of cancers. We have developed a comprehensive experimental pipeline, involving chemical parsing with clinically relevant BH3-mimetics, gene editing, and interrogation of standard-of-care chemotherapy combinations in cell lines, patient-derived tissues and animal models. To date, we have identified therapeutic targets and novel chemotherapeutic combinations in a range of aggressive solid cancers with low survival rates (<1 year), including melanoma, mesothelioma and biliary tract cancers.
Our data provides a compelling rationale for the clinical investigation of targeting the BCL-2-regulated cell death pathway for the treatment of a range of solid cancers. Targeting generic pathways essential to the survival of tumours is an attractive approach benefitting cancers lacking well-characterised genetic defects.
Our research focusses on the application of BH3-mimetics for the treatment of cancers. We have developed a comprehensive experimental pipeline, involving chemical parsing with clinically relevant BH3-mimetics, gene editing, and interrogation of standard-of-care chemotherapy combinations in cell lines, patient-derived tissues and animal models. To date, we have identified therapeutic targets and novel chemotherapeutic combinations in a range of aggressive solid cancers with low survival rates (<1 year), including melanoma, mesothelioma and biliary tract cancers.
Our data provides a compelling rationale for the clinical investigation of targeting the BCL-2-regulated cell death pathway for the treatment of a range of solid cancers. Targeting generic pathways essential to the survival of tumours is an attractive approach benefitting cancers lacking well-characterised genetic defects.