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Lessons Learned from Past Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Drug Discovery Efforts.

Zhouling XieShuzeng HouXiao Xiao YangYajun DuanJihong HanQin WangChenzhong Liao
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2022)
Inhibition of cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) has become an effective therapeutic strategy for treating various diseases, especially cancer. Over almost three decades, although great efforts have been made to discover CDK inhibitors, many of which have entered clinical trials, only four CDK inhibitors have been approved. In the process of CDK inhibitor development, many difficulties and misunderstandings have hampered their discovery and clinical applications, which mainly include inadequate understanding of the biological functions of CDKs, less attention paid to pan- and multi-CDK inhibitors, nonideal isoform selectivity of developed selective CDK inhibitors, overlooking the metabolic stability of early discovered CDK inhibitors, no effective resistance solutions, and a lack of available combination therapy and effective biomarkers for CDK therapies. After reviewing the mechanisms of CDKs and the research progress of CDK inhibitors, this perspective summarizes and discusses these difficulties or lessons, hoping to facilitate the successful discovery of more useful CDK inhibitors.
Keyphrases
  • cell cycle
  • clinical trial
  • cell proliferation
  • combination therapy
  • drug discovery
  • small molecule
  • randomized controlled trial
  • working memory
  • young adults
  • quality improvement
  • protein kinase
  • study protocol
  • phase ii