Resumen
In cancer cells, the DNA repair response can be exploited as an ?Achilles heel? to trigger programmed cell death pathways and tumor elimination. Rather than involving ?naked? DNA, repair occurs in the context of histone and non-histone proteins in the vicinity of the damage. Drugs that target different epigenetic mechanisms can lead to the synergistic downregulation of critical DNA repair factors, including those associated with poor survival in colorectal cancer patients. Notably, normal colonic epithelial cells are more resistant than colon cancer cells to the epigenetic drug combinations. In the current investigation, cell-based assays and preclinical animal models reaffirmed the crosstalk between DNA repair and epigenetic regulatory mechanisms, and provided new avenues for precision oncology and cancer interception.