DNA Damage/DNA Repair
The DNA in a human cell receives tens of thousands of damages per day due to both external (exogenous) and internal (endogenous) stress. The exogenous damages are caused by chemical contamination, UV light, ionizing radiation and alkylation/methylation etc, while the endogenous damages are coming from oxidation, alkylation and hydrolysis of bases etc. Since single strand and double strand breaks of DNA will occur after the damage, unrepaired DNA damage leads to cell senescent, apoptosis and malignancies etc. To overcome this threat, cell has developed DNA damage response, to detect DNA damage and mediate its repair.
DNA repair involves multiple mechanisms such as mismatch, base excision, and nucleotide excision repair etc. A group of proteins and pathways are participated in those processes. ATM/ATR kinases and DNA-PK are crucial for the detection of the DNA damage. Chromatin remodelers regulate chromatin accessibility for the DNA repair factors to function. RPA, Rad51 and the fanconi anemia proteins act directly on repairing the DNA damage. p53 network, the RAS GTPase superfamily, and the ubiquitin system also play important part in the DNA damage response. Aberrant DNA damage response is linked to aging, cancer and immune diseases.
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A4153 BMN 673Summary: Potent PARP inhibitor
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A4071 Fluorouracil (Adrucil)3 CitationTarget: Thymidylate SynthaseSummary: Antitumor agent;inhibitor of thymidylate synthase
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A4154 Olaparib (AZD2281, Ku-0059436)12 CitationSummary: Potent PARP1/PARP2 inhibitor
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A4156 Rucaparib (AG-014699,PF-01367338)Summary: Potent PARP inhibitor
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A4157 Iniparib (BSI-201)Summary: PARP1 inhibitor,intravenously adminsitered
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A4158 AG-143611 CitationSummary: Potent PARP1 inhibitor
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A4159 PJ34 hydrochlorideSummary: PARP inhibitor,potent and cell-permeable
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A4160 A-966492Target: PARPSummary: PARP-1/-2 inhibitor, highly potent
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A4161 3-aminobenzamide1 CitationSummary: Potent PARP inhibitor
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A4163 UPF 1069Target: PARPSummary: Selective PARP2 inhibitor