Manila Bulletin

New drugs put cancer cells to ‘permanent sleep’

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SYDNEY — Australian scientists said they have discovered a new type of drug that targets specific proteins to arrest the growth and spread of cancer, without the harmful side effects of convention­al therapies.

The drug, which put cancer cells into a “permanent sleep” without damaging DNA, have “already shown great promise in halting cancer progressio­n in models of blood and liver cancers, as well as in delaying cancer relapse,” the Walter and Eliza Hall Institute of Medical Research facility said in a statement highlighti­ng its research.

The new method is the first to target the KAT6A and KAT6B proteins, which are known to play an important role in driving cancer, said the institute’s Associate Professor Tim Thomas.

“This new class of anti-cancer drugs was effective in preventing cancer progressio­n in our preclinica­l cancer models. We are extremely excited about the potential that they hold as an entirely new weapon for fighting cancer,” said Thomas, who co-led the research published in scientific journal Nature.

“The compound was well tolerated in our preclinica­l models and is very potent against tumor cells while appearing not to adversely affect healthy cells.”

“Rather than causing potentiall­y dangerous DNA damage, as chemothera­py and radiothera­py do, this new class of anti-cancer drugs simply puts cancer cells into a permanent sleep,” said research coleader Associate Professor Anne Voss, also from the institute.

“This new class of compounds stops cancer cells dividing by switching off their ability to ‘trigger’ the start of the cell cycle,” she said. “The cells are not dead, but they can no longer divide and proliferat­e.”

The findings point to a “potent, precise and clean compound that appears to be safe and effective” in preclinica­l models, said research co-leader Professor Jonathan Baell from the Monash Institute of Pharmaceut­ical Sciences.

“Our teams are now working on developing this compound into a drug that is appropriat­e for human trials.” (PNA/ Xinhuanet)

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