• J. Mol. Med. · Mar 2016

    Review

    K-Ras protein as a drug target.

    • Frank McCormick.
    • UCSF Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, 1450 3rd Street, San Francisco, CA, 94158-9001, USA. mccormick@cc.ucsf.edu.
    • J. Mol. Med. 2016 Mar 1; 94 (3): 253-8.

    AbstractK-Ras proteins are major drivers of human cancers, playing a direct causal role in about one million cancer cases/year. In cancers driven by mutant K-Ras, the protein is locked in the active, GTP-bound state constitutively, through a defect in the off-switch mechanism. As such, the mutant protein resembles the normal K-Ras protein from a structural perspective, making therapeutic attack extremely challenging. K-Ras is a member of a large family of related proteins, which share very similar GDP/GTP-binding domains, making specific therapies more difficult. Furthermore, Ras proteins lack pockets to which small molecules can bind with high affinity, with a few interesting exceptions. However, new insights into the structure and function of K-Ras proteins reveal opportunities for intervention that were not appreciated many years ago, when efforts were launched to develop K-Ras therapies. Furthermore, K-Ras undergoes post-translational modification and interactions with cellular signaling proteins that present additional therapeutic opportunities, such as specific binding to calmodulin and regulation of non-canonical Wnt signaling.

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