cx-4945 has been researched along with Medulloblastoma* in 2 studies
1 review(s) available for cx-4945 and Medulloblastoma
Article | Year |
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Medulloblastoma drugs in development: Current leads, trials and drawbacks.
Medulloblastoma (MB) is the most common malignant brain tumor in children. Current treatment for MB includes surgical resection, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Despite significant progress in its management, a portion of children relapse and tumor recurrence carries a poor prognosis. Based on their molecular and clinical characteristics, MB patients are clinically classified into four groups: Wnt, Hh, Group 3, and Group 4. With our increased understanding of relevant molecular pathways disrupted in MB, the development of targeted therapies for MB has also increased. Targeted drugs have shown unique privileges over traditional cytotoxic therapies in balancing efficacy and toxicity, with many of them approved and widely used clinically. The aim of this review is to present the recent progress on targeted chemotherapies for the treatment of all classes of MB. Topics: Animals; Antineoplastic Agents; Cell Line, Tumor; Cerebellar Neoplasms; Humans; Medulloblastoma; Protein Kinase Inhibitors | 2021 |
1 other study(ies) available for cx-4945 and Medulloblastoma
Article | Year |
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Developmental phosphoproteomics identifies the kinase CK2 as a driver of Hedgehog signaling and a therapeutic target in medulloblastoma.
A major limitation of targeted cancer therapy is the rapid emergence of drug resistance, which often arises through mutations at or downstream of the drug target or through intrinsic resistance of subpopulations of tumor cells. Medulloblastoma (MB), the most common pediatric brain tumor, is no exception, and MBs that are driven by sonic hedgehog (SHH) signaling are particularly aggressive and drug-resistant. To find new drug targets and therapeutics for MB that may be less susceptible to common resistance mechanisms, we used a developmental phosphoproteomics approach in murine granule neuron precursors (GNPs), the developmental cell of origin of MB. The protein kinase CK2 emerged as a driver of hundreds of phosphorylation events during the proliferative, MB-like stage of GNP growth, including the phosphorylation of three of the eight proteins commonly amplified in MB. CK2 was critical to the stabilization and activity of the transcription factor GLI2, a late downstream effector in SHH signaling. CK2 inhibitors decreased the viability of primary SHH-type MB patient cells in culture and blocked the growth of murine MB tumors that were resistant to currently available Hh inhibitors, thereby extending the survival of tumor-bearing mice. Because of structural interactions, one CK2 inhibitor (CX-4945) inhibited both wild-type and mutant CK2, indicating that this drug may avoid at least one common mode of acquired resistance. These findings suggest that CK2 inhibitors may be effective for treating patients with MB and show how phosphoproteomics may be used to gain insight into developmental biology and pathology. Topics: Anilides; Animals; Casein Kinase II; Cell Line, Tumor; Cerebellar Neoplasms; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Hedgehog Proteins; Humans; Kaplan-Meier Estimate; Medulloblastoma; Mice; Mice, Inbred NOD; Mice, Knockout; Mice, Nude; Mice, SCID; Naphthyridines; Neoplasms, Experimental; NIH 3T3 Cells; Phenazines; Phosphoproteins; Proteomics; Pyridines; Signal Transduction; Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays | 2018 |