Application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor development

Kinases have a pivotal role in phosphorylation and kinase dysregulation has been implicated in the occurrence and progression of various diseases. By mid-2024 the Food and Drug Administration had approved 81 small-molecule kinase inhibitors targeting greater than 30 kinases, providing substantial cl...

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Main Authors: Kun Xing, Shujun Li, Jinghuan Li, Dan Liu, Min Huang, Linxiang Zhao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Compuscript Ltd 2025-01-01
Series:Acta Materia Medica
Online Access:https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.15212/AMM-2024-0070
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author Kun Xing
Shujun Li
Jinghuan Li
Dan Liu
Min Huang
Linxiang Zhao
author_facet Kun Xing
Shujun Li
Jinghuan Li
Dan Liu
Min Huang
Linxiang Zhao
author_sort Kun Xing
collection DOAJ
description Kinases have a pivotal role in phosphorylation and kinase dysregulation has been implicated in the occurrence and progression of various diseases. By mid-2024 the Food and Drug Administration had approved 81 small-molecule kinase inhibitors targeting greater than 30 kinases, providing substantial clinical benefits for patients with cancer and other diseases. However, many reported kinase inhibitors exhibit poor target selectivity, limited solubility, and issues with drug resistance. To address these challenges medicinal chemists have used a macrocyclization strategy to optimize these molecules and three macrocyclic kinase inhibitors (lorlatinib [ALK/ROS1], pacritinib [Flt3/JAK2], and repotrectinib [TRK/ROS1]) have received FDA approval. The macrocyclization strategy is now widely used to enhance kinase inhibitory activity, overcome drug resistance caused by point mutations, improve kinase selectivity, and optimize drug-like properties. In this review we provide a comprehensive overview of the utilization of macrocyclization in the optimization of kinase inhibitors by detailing the structural modification process from lead compounds to macrocyclic molecules that has been applied in recent years. In addition, we discuss the limitations of existing macrocyclic kinase inhibitors and propose key considerations for the development of improved macrocyclic molecules. We aim for this review to offer valuable insights for future advances in kinase inhibitor development.
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spelling doaj-art-c80566fc0fd84ae5a2edd05fc02c68c72025-01-08T17:00:10ZengCompuscript LtdActa Materia Medica2737-79462025-01-014113510.15212/AMM-2024-0070Application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor developmentKun XingShujun LiJinghuan LiDan LiuMin HuangLinxiang ZhaoKinases have a pivotal role in phosphorylation and kinase dysregulation has been implicated in the occurrence and progression of various diseases. By mid-2024 the Food and Drug Administration had approved 81 small-molecule kinase inhibitors targeting greater than 30 kinases, providing substantial clinical benefits for patients with cancer and other diseases. However, many reported kinase inhibitors exhibit poor target selectivity, limited solubility, and issues with drug resistance. To address these challenges medicinal chemists have used a macrocyclization strategy to optimize these molecules and three macrocyclic kinase inhibitors (lorlatinib [ALK/ROS1], pacritinib [Flt3/JAK2], and repotrectinib [TRK/ROS1]) have received FDA approval. The macrocyclization strategy is now widely used to enhance kinase inhibitory activity, overcome drug resistance caused by point mutations, improve kinase selectivity, and optimize drug-like properties. In this review we provide a comprehensive overview of the utilization of macrocyclization in the optimization of kinase inhibitors by detailing the structural modification process from lead compounds to macrocyclic molecules that has been applied in recent years. In addition, we discuss the limitations of existing macrocyclic kinase inhibitors and propose key considerations for the development of improved macrocyclic molecules. We aim for this review to offer valuable insights for future advances in kinase inhibitor development.https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.15212/AMM-2024-0070
spellingShingle Kun Xing
Shujun Li
Jinghuan Li
Dan Liu
Min Huang
Linxiang Zhao
Application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor development
Acta Materia Medica
title Application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor development
title_full Application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor development
title_fullStr Application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor development
title_full_unstemmed Application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor development
title_short Application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor development
title_sort application of a macrocyclization strategy in kinase inhibitor development
url https://www.scienceopen.com/hosted-document?doi=10.15212/AMM-2024-0070
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AT jinghuanli applicationofamacrocyclizationstrategyinkinaseinhibitordevelopment
AT danliu applicationofamacrocyclizationstrategyinkinaseinhibitordevelopment
AT minhuang applicationofamacrocyclizationstrategyinkinaseinhibitordevelopment
AT linxiangzhao applicationofamacrocyclizationstrategyinkinaseinhibitordevelopment