| Literature DB >> 24756955 |
Xin Yu1, Sumana Narayanan, Alexei Vazquez, Darren R Carpizo.
Abstract
Loss of function of p53, either through mutations in the gene or through mutations to other members of the pathway that inactivate wild-type p53, remains a critically important aspect of human cancer development. As such, p53 remains the most commonly mutated gene in human cancer. For these reasons, pharmacologic activation of the p53 pathway has been a highly sought after, yet unachieved goal in developmental therapeutics. Recently progress has been made not only in the discovery of small molecules that target wild-type and mutant p53, but also in the initiation and completion of the first in-human clinical trials for several of these drugs. Here, we review the current literature of drugs that target wild-type and mutant p53 with a focus on small-molecule type compounds. We discuss common means of drug discovery and group them according to their common mechanisms of action. Lastly, we review the current status of the various drugs in the development process and identify newer areas of p53 tumor biology that may prove therapeutically useful.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24756955 PMCID: PMC4039992 DOI: 10.1007/s10495-014-0990-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Apoptosis ISSN: 1360-8185 Impact factor: 4.677
Fig. 1The p53 pathway. p53 is a critical responder to various modes of cellular stress substantiating its role as a key tumor suppressor in cancer biology. These modes serve to activate p53 both by stabilizing the protein (decreasing its MDM2 mediated proteasomal degradation) and enhancing its function as a transcription factor. The response to p53 encompasses a wide range of cellular processes that allow the cell to recover/repair the damage induced by the stress. The determination of which effector pathway it uses is dependent on several variables including the source of the stress, the cell type and surrounding microenvironment
Compounds and small molecules that target wild-type and mutant p53
| Molecule/compound | Mechanism of action | Target | Stage of development |
|---|---|---|---|
| Activate wild-type p53 | |||
| Nutlins RG7112 (RO5045337) | Inhibits p53-MDM2 binding | MDM2 | Phase I clinical trial (NCT01164033, NCT01143740, NCT00623870 and NCT00559533) [ |
| Benzodiazepinediones (TDP665759) | Inhibits p53-MDM2 binding | MDM2 | Preclinical [ |
| Spiro-oxindoles (MI-219) | Inhibits p53-MDM2 binding | MDM2 | Preclinical [ |
| RITA | Inhibits p53 binding | p53 (WT and mut) | Preclinical [ |
| JNJ-26854165 (Serdemetan) | Inhibits p53-MDM2 binding | MDM2 | Phase I clinical trial (NCT00676910) [ |
| Tenovin 1 and 6 | Inhibits SirT1 and SirT2 (protein deacetylators) | SirT1 and SirT2 | Preclinical [ |
| SJ-172550 | Inhibits p53:MDM2/X binding | MDMX | Preclinial [ |
| RO-2443/RO-5693 | Inhibits p53:MDM2/X binding | MDMX | Preclinical [ |
| XI-011 | Repression of MDMX promoter | MDMX | Preclinical [ |
| Re-activate mutant p53 | |||
| CP-31398 | Interacts with DNA, reactive oxygen species | V173A, R175S, R249S, R273H | Preclinical [ |
| PRIMA-1 (APR-246) | Covalently modifies cysteine residues, protein folding | R273H, R175H | Phase I clinical trial (NCT00900614) [ |
| MIRA-1 | Alkylation Cysteine and lysine residues | R175H, R248 W, R248Q, R273H, R282W | Preclinical [ |
| PhiKan083 | Slows thermal denaturation | Y220C | Preclinical [ |
| NSC319726 | Zinc chelation/Redox modulation | R175H | Preclinical [ |
Fig. 2Mechanisms of action for drugs that target wild-type p53—a number of compounds now exist that serve to enhance the function of wild-type p53 by increasing the stability of p53 through various mechanisms: The largest group (nutlins, benzodiazepinediones and spiro-oxindoles) serve to increase the stability of p53 by targeting the MDM2:p53 interaction. This leads to decreased MDM2 mediated proteasomal degradation of p53. MDMX inhibitors block the MDMX-p53 interaction so as to activate wild-type p53. RITA also stabilizes wild-type p53 supposedly through binding p53 and inducing a conformational change that disrupts the p53:MDM2 binding, though this is controversial. Other compounds (tenovins) enhance the stability of p53 through inhibition of the sirtuins