A Chemical Inhibitor of p53 That Protects Mice from the Side Effects of Cancer Therapy

Pavel G. Komarov(Rush University Medical Center), Elena A. Komarova(University of Illinois Chicago), Roman V. Kondratov(University of Illinois Chicago), Konstantin Christov-Tselkov(University of Illinois Chicago), John S. Coon(Rush University Medical Center), Mikhail V. Chernov(Cleveland Clinic), Andrei V. Gudkov(University of Illinois Chicago)
Science
September 10, 1999
Cited by 1,275

Abstract

Chemotherapy and radiation therapy for cancer often have severe side effects that limit their efficacy. Because these effects are in part determined by p53-mediated apoptosis, temporary suppression of p53 has been suggested as a therapeutic strategy to prevent damage of normal tissues during treatment of p53-deficient tumors. To test this possibility, a small molecule was isolated for its ability to reversibly block p53-dependent transcriptional activation and apoptosis. This compound, pifithrin-alpha, protected mice from the lethal genotoxic stress associated with anticancer treatment without promoting the formation of tumors. Thus, inhibitors of p53 may be useful drugs for reducing the side effects of cancer therapy and other types of stress associated with p53 induction.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis