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      DNA damage signalling guards against activated oncogenes and tumour progression.

      Oncogene
      Animals, Cell Aging, DNA Damage, genetics, DNA Repair, Genes, Tumor Suppressor, Humans, Neoplasms, prevention & control, Oncogenes, Signal Transduction

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          Abstract

          DNA damage response (DDR), the guardian of genomic integrity, emerges as an oncogene-inducible biological barrier against progression of cancer beyond its early stages. Recent evidence from both cell culture and animal models as well as analyses of clinical specimens show that activation of numerous oncogenes and loss of some tumour suppressors result in DNA replication stress and DNA damage that alarm the cellular DDR machinery, a multifaceted response orchestrated by the ATR-Chk1 and ATM-Chk2 kinase signalling pathways. Such activation of the DDR network leads to cellular senescence or death of oncogene-transformed cells, resulting in delay or prevention of tumorigenesis. At the same time, the ongoing chronic DDR activation creates selective pressure that eventually favours outgrowth of malignant clones with genetic or epigenetic defects in the genome maintenance machinery, such as aberrations in the ATM-Chk2-p53 cascade and other DDR components. Furthermore, the executive DDR machinery is shared by at least two anticancer barriers, as both the oncogene-induced DNA replication stress and telomere shortening impact the cell fate decisions through convergence on DNA damage signalling. In this study, we highlight recent advances in this rapidly evolving area of cancer research, with particular emphasis on mechanistic insights, emerging issues of special conceptual significance and discussion of major remaining challenges and implications of the concept of DDR as a tumorigenesis barrier for experimental and clinical oncology.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          18066090
          10.1038/sj.onc.1210881

          Chemistry
          Animals,Cell Aging,DNA Damage,genetics,DNA Repair,Genes, Tumor Suppressor,Humans,Neoplasms,prevention & control,Oncogenes,Signal Transduction

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