Research Progress Evaluating the Function and Mechanism of Anti-Tumor Peptides.
Xinxing PanJuan XuXuemei JiaPublished in: Cancer management and research (2020)
Malignant tumors cause a high mortality rate worldwide, and they severely threaten human health and negatively affect the economy. Despite the advancements in tumor-related molecular genetics and effective new processes in anti-tumor drug development, the anti-tumor drugs currently used in clinical practice are inadequate due to their poor efficacy or severe side effects. Therefore, developing new safe and efficient drugs is a top priority for curing cancer. The peptide has become a suitable agent due to its exact molecular weight between whole protein and small molecule, and it has high targeting ability, high penetrability, low immunogenicity, and is convenient to synthesize and easy to modify. Because of these advantages, peptides have excellent prospect for application as anti-tumor agents. This article reviews the recent research progress evaluating anti-tumor peptides and their anti-tumor mechanisms, and may act as a reference for the future development and clinical application of anti-tumor peptides.
Keyphrases
- small molecule
- human health
- amino acid
- risk assessment
- clinical practice
- type diabetes
- randomized controlled trial
- current status
- risk factors
- squamous cell carcinoma
- systematic review
- early onset
- papillary thyroid
- cardiovascular events
- single molecule
- density functional theory
- childhood cancer
- lymph node metastasis