Off-target toxicity is a common mechanism of action of cancer drugs undergoing clinical trials
Lin A, Giuliano CJ, Palladino A, John KM, Abramowicz C, Yuan ML, Sausville EL, Lukow DA, Liu L, Chait AR, Galluzzo ZC, Tucker C, Sheltzer JM. Off-target toxicity is a common mechanism of action of cancer drugs undergoing clinical trials. Science Translational Medicine 2019, 11 PMID: 31511426, PMCID: PMC7717492, DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aaw8412.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsClinical trialsCancer drugsDose-limiting toxicityLack of efficacyDrug Administration approvalNumber of therapiesCancer cell proliferationMultiple cancer typesMechanism of actionClinical benefitAdministration approvalCommon causeTrial failuresSmall molecule inhibitorsClinical testingCDK11 expressionHuman patientsPreclinical settingCancer typesU.S. FoodTarget toxicityNew drugsDrugsCell proliferationDrug-indication pairsGenerating Single Cell–Derived Knockout Clones in Mammalian Cells with CRISPR/Cas9
Giuliano CJ, Lin A, Girish V, Sheltzer JM. Generating Single Cell–Derived Knockout Clones in Mammalian Cells with CRISPR/Cas9. Current Protocols In Molecular Biology 2019, 128: e100. PMID: 31503414, PMCID: PMC6741428, DOI: 10.1002/cpmb.100.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsKnockout clonesMammalian cellsCell linesCRISPR/Cas9 technologyGuide RNA designMammalian cell linesGene lossClonal cell linesGene functionProtein functionGene targetingNew cell lineCas9 technologyTargeted geneFunction mutationsInterclonal heterogeneityRNA designSingle cellsSuccessful derivationClonesCRISPRCRISPR deliveryBiological reagentsRapid generationMutations