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Towards a druggable epitranscriptome: Compounds that target RNA modifications in cancer.

María BerdascoManel Esteller
Published in: British journal of pharmacology (2021)
Epitranscriptomics is an exciting emerging area that studies biochemical modifications of RNA. The field has been opened up by the technical efforts of the last decade to characterize and quantify RNA modifications, and this has led to a map of post-transcriptional RNA marks in normal cell fate and development. However, the scientific interest has been fuelled by the discovery of aberrant epitranscriptomes associated with human diseases, mainly cancer. The challenge is now to see whether epitrancriptomics offers mechanisms that can be effectively targeted by low MW compounds and are thus druggable. In this review, we will describe the principal RNA modifications (with a focus on mRNA), summarize the latest scientific evidence of their dysregulation in cancer and provide an overview of the state-of-the-art drug discovery to target the epitranscriptome. Finally, we will discuss the principal challenges in the field of chemical biology and drug development to increase the potential of targeted-RNA for clinical benefit.
Keyphrases
  • papillary thyroid
  • drug discovery
  • squamous cell
  • nucleic acid
  • endothelial cells
  • gene expression
  • cell fate
  • transcription factor
  • lymph node metastasis
  • young adults
  • single cell