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Potential new drug blocks pathway of deadliest cancer

Published on April 20, 2009 at 11:38 PM · No Comments

Scientists at Cancer Research Technology Ltd (CRT) will present exciting new findings showing that a potent and selective inhibitor of protein kinase D called CRT0066101, inhibits the growth of pancreatic tumours.

The research - to be presented by CRT's Dr Christopher Ireson at the American Association for Cancer Research conference (Sunday) - was a collaborative effort between scientists at CRT's discovery laboratories and the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center. These results show for the first'time that an inhibitor of PKD can slow the growth of tumours in pancreatic cancer models. In addition, experiments carried out by CRT have shown that CRT0066101 is also effective at inhibiting the growth of tumours in a lung cancer model. The scientists believe that the drug has the potential to treat other cancers too.

PKD is a relatively newly identified family of serine/threonine kinases comprising PKD1, PKD2 and PKD3. The potential of PKD as a new drug target was discovered by Enrique Rozengurt, Doreen Cantrell and Peter Parker and funded by Cancer Research UK. Following this discovery, an intensive drug discovery effort led by CRT's head of medicinal chemistry, Dr Tony Raynham, culminated in the identification of CRT0066101 as a lead candidate for pre-clinical studies. Since then, PKD has been identified as playing a central role in the development of a number of cancers. In addition to its role in the growth of tumour cells, PKD has also been shown to play a pivotal role in cell survival and angiogenesis - a process by which tumours form new blood vessels - which is central to tumour growth and spread.

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