Antitumor activity of a systemic STING-activating non-nucleotide cGAMP mimetic
Scripps Research Institute · California Institute for Biomedical Research
Abstract
Targeting STING for cancer therapy Activation of the STING (stimulator of interferon genes) protein by cyclic dinucleotide metabolites plays a critical role in antitumor immunity. The development of synthetic STING agonists is therefore being pursued as a strategy for cancer therapy, but the inherent instability of dinucleotides has limited current efforts. Pan et al. and Chin et al. identified stable STING agonists that act in a “closed” conformation similar to the natural STING ligand, cyclic guanosine monophosphate–adenosine monophosphate (see the Perspective by Gajewski and Higgs). The small molecules can be given orally—an advantage over previously developed STING agonists, which required intratumoral…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 19.82
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 35
Authors
27- ENEmily N. Chin
Scripps Research Institute
- CYChenguang YuCorresponding
Scripps Research Institute, California Institute for Biomedical Research
- VFVincent F. VartabedianCorresponding
Scripps Research Institute
- YJYing JiaCorresponding
Scripps Research Institute
- MNM. N. Satish Kumar
California Institute for Biomedical Research
Topics & keywords
- Sting
- Stimulator of interferon genes
- Innate immune system
- TLR7
- Guanosine
- Priming (agriculture)
- Cell biology
- Chemistry