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2000
Volume 6, Issue 6
  • ISSN: 1386-2073
  • E-ISSN: 1875-5402

Abstract

Chemotherapeutic drugs for cancer treatment have been traditionally originated by the isolation of natural products from differet environmental niches, by chemical synthesis or by a combination of both approaches thus generating semisynthetic drugs. In the last years, a number of gene clusters from several antitumor biosynthetic pathways, mainly produced by actinomycetes and belonging to the polyketides family, are being characterized. Genetic manipulation of these antitumor biosynthetic pathways will offer in the near future an alternative for the generation of novel antitumor derivatives and thus complementing current methods for obtaining novel anticancer drugs. Novel antitumor derivatives have been produced by targetted gene disruption and heterologous expression of single (or a few) gene(s) in another hosts or by combining genes from different, but structurally related, biosynthetic pathways (“combinatorial biosynthesis”). These strategies take advantage from the “relaxed substrate specificity” that characterize secondary metabolism enzymes.

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/content/journals/cchts/10.2174/138620703106298699
2003-09-01
2025-01-19
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/content/journals/cchts/10.2174/138620703106298699
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  • Article Type:
    Review Article
Keyword(s): actinomycetes; Anticancer Drugs; antitumor; heterologous; polyketides
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