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The study of the factors affecting colorectal cancer chemotherapy
Dolníková, Alexandra ; Opattová, Alena (advisor) ; Václavíková, Radka (referee)
Application of cytotoxic chemotherapy still remains the essential treatment strategy in advanced colorectal cancer. The intrinsic and acquired drug resistance represents one of the reasons that may even lead to failure of cancer therapy. The DNA damage response pathways have been shown to play an important role in the development of chemoresistance. There is sufficient evidence showing the high-frequency deregulated expression of many DNA repair genes across multiple cancer types. An example of such gene in colorectal cancer is MRE11, which encodes protein known as a sensor of DNA double-strand breaks. In year 2016, there was a substantial study published by our group at The Department of Molecular Biology of Cancer (IEM CAS, Prague), the study analysed the association of polymorphisms in predicted microRNA target sites of double-strand breaks (DSBs) repair genes, including MRE11, and clinical outcome and efficacy of chemotherapy in colorectal cancer. Our hypothesis, based on the mentioned study, is that specifically and exactly defined microRNAs with ability to regulate certain DNA repair proteins may not only affect the survival of colorectal cancer cells, but also the sensitivity to chemotherapy. In practical part of the submitted thesis we have identified miR-140 as a potential regulator of...

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