| Literature DB >> 16740718 |
John S Tokarski1, John A Newitt, Chieh Ying J Chang, Janet D Cheng, Michael Wittekind, Susan E Kiefer, Kevin Kish, Francis Y F Lee, Robert Borzillerri, Louis J Lombardo, Dianlin Xie, Yaqun Zhang, Herbert E Klei.
Abstract
Chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) is caused by the constitutively activated tyrosine kinase breakpoint cluster (BCR)-ABL. Current frontline therapy for CML is imatinib, an inhibitor of BCR-ABL. Although imatinib has a high rate of clinical success in early phase CML, treatment resistance is problematic, particularly in later stages of the disease, and is frequently mediated by mutations in BCR-ABL. Dasatinib (BMS-354825) is a multitargeted tyrosine kinase inhibitor that targets oncogenic pathways and is a more potent inhibitor than imatinib against wild-type BCR-ABL. It has also shown preclinical activity against all but one of the imatinib-resistant BCR-ABL mutants tested to date. Analysis of the crystal structure of dasatinib-bound ABL kinase suggests that the increased binding affinity of dasatinib over imatinib is at least partially due to its ability to recognize multiple states of BCR-ABL. The structure also provides an explanation for the activity of dasatinib against imatinib-resistant BCR-ABL mutants.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16740718 DOI: 10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-05-4187
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Res ISSN: 0008-5472 Impact factor: 12.701