Journal article

Repurposing of drugs as STAT3 inhibitors for cancer therapy

PS Thilakasiri, RS Dmello, TL Nero, MW Parker, M Ernst, AL Chand

Seminars in Cancer Biology | Published : 2021

Abstract

Drug repurposing is a valuable approach in delivering new cancer therapeutics rapidly into the clinic. Existing safety and patient tolerability data for drugs already in clinical use represent an untapped resource in terms of identifying therapeutic agents for off-label protein targets. The multicellular effects of STAT3 mediated by a range of various upstream signaling pathways make it an attractive therapeutic target with utility in a range of diseases including cancer, and has led to the development of a variety of STAT3 inhibitors. Moreover, heightened STAT3 transcriptional activation in tumor cells and within the cells of the tumor microenvironment contribute to disease progression. Con..

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University of Melbourne Researchers

Grants

Awarded by National Health and Medical Research Council


Funding Acknowledgements

The authors acknowledge funding support from the following grants schemes: National Medical Health and Research Council (NHMRC) of Australia, Cancer Council Victoria, Austin Medical Research Fund, La Trobe University Research Focus Area Grant and the University of Melbourne School of Biomedical Sciences Translational Research Grant. Institutional funding from the Victorian State Government Operational Infrastructure Support Scheme to Bio21 and ONJCRI is acknowledged. The authors also acknowledge NHMRC Fellowship support to A.L.C (1062247), M.W.P (1117183), and M.E (1079257).