Abstract
Wnt signaling is dysregulated in many cancers and is therefore an attractive therapeutic target. The focus of drug development has recently shifted away from downstream inhibitors of β-catenin. Active inhibitors of Wnt secretion and Wnt/receptor interactions have been developed that are now entering clinical trials. Such agents include inhibitors of Wnt secretion, as well as recombinant proteins that minimize Wnt-Frizzled interactions. These new therapies arrive together with the recent insight that cancer-specific upregulation of Wnt receptors at the cell surface regulates cellular sensitivity to Wnts. Loss-of-function mutations in RNF43 or ZNRF3 and gain-of-function chromosome translocations involving RSPO2 and RSPO3 are surprisingly common and markedly increase Wnt/β-catenin signaling in response to secreted Wnts. These mutations may be predictive biomarkers to select patients responsive to newly developed upstream Wnt inhibitors.
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CITATION STYLE
Madan, B., & Virshup, D. M. (2015). Targeting Wnts at the Source-New Mechanisms, New Biomarkers, New Drugs. Molecular Cancer Therapeutics, 14(5), 1087–1094. https://doi.org/10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-14-1038
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