2022
DOI: 10.2174/0929866529666221003124202
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Targeting K-Ras Mutations Show Promise Towards Ending Ras’s “Undruggable” Era

Abstract: It has almost been 40 years since the Ras proteins were discovered as the first human oncogenes. They remain among the most important genes for regulating mammalian cell growth and are involved in more than a quarter of human cancers. Out of 167 members of the Ras superfamily, K-Ras mutations are the most abundant in human cancers. Particularly, the K-Ras G12C mutations are known to be involved in pancreatic, colon and lung cancers as well as leukemias. Though progress has been made, approaches that target Ras… Show more

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