Pyrazine-based small molecule kinase inhibitors: clinical applications and patent review (2019-2023).
Aisha A AlsfoukPublished in: Future medicinal chemistry (2024)
Protein kinases play a key role in cellular signaling pathways including proliferation, apoptosis, inflammation and immune regulation. Therefore, targeting kinases with small molecules has emerged as a therapeutic potential in cancers and other diseases including inflammatory and autoimmune disorders. The main chemical motifs of the available small molecule kinase inhibitors are heterocyclic, nitrogen-containing and six-membered rings including pyrazine. Several potent and selective pyrazine-based kinase inhibitors have been developed and progressed into clinical trials. The data of clinical application of kinase inhibitors demonstrate good clinical activity with manageable toxicity in several relapse-resistant malignancies and severe to moderate immunological disorders. All pyrazine-based kinase inhibitors are orally active. This paper reviews the most recent kinase literature (2019-2023) related to pyrazine-based small molecule inhibitors. This review includes the FDA (Food and Drug Administration)-approved and patent agents along with their targeted kinase, scaffold, potency, selectivity profile, assignee and biological results in clinical and preclinical studies.
Keyphrases
- small molecule
- protein protein
- oxidative stress
- drug administration
- clinical trial
- signaling pathway
- cancer therapy
- systematic review
- cell death
- tyrosine kinase
- protein kinase
- high intensity
- early onset
- mesenchymal stem cells
- electronic health record
- pi k akt
- bone marrow
- cell proliferation
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- free survival
- open label
- human health
- artificial intelligence