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Optogenetics in cancer drug discovery.

Michał KiełbusJakub CzapińskiAdrian OdrzywolskiGrażyna StasiakKamila SzymańskaJoanna KałafutMichał KosKrzysztof GiannopoulosAndrzej StepulakAdolfo Rivero-Muller
Published in: Expert opinion on drug discovery (2018)
The discovery and domestication of biomolecules that respond to light has taken a light of its own, providing new molecular tools with incredible spatio-temporal resolution to manipulate cellular behavior. Areas covered: The authors herein analyze the current optogenetic tools in light of their current, and potential, uses in cancer drug discovery, biosafety and cancer biology. Expert opinion: The pipeline from drug discovery to the clinic is plagued with drawbacks, where most drugs fail in either efficacy or safety. These issues require the redesign of the pipeline and the development of more controllable/personalized therapies. Light is, aside from inexpensive, almost harmless if used appropriately, can be directed to single cells or organs with controllable penetration, and comes in a variety of wavelengths. Light-responsive systems can activate, inhibit or compensate cell signaling pathways or specific cellular events, allowing the specific control of the genome and epigenome, and modulate cell fate and transformation. These synthetic molecular tools have the potential to revolutionize drug discovery and cancer research.
Keyphrases
  • drug discovery
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  • squamous cell
  • primary care
  • lymph node metastasis
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • cell fate
  • dna methylation
  • induced apoptosis
  • epithelial mesenchymal transition
  • clinical practice