| Literature DB >> 29134113 |
Rand Shahin1,1, Omar Shaheen2,2, Faris El-Dahiyat3,3, Maha Habash4,4, Sana Saffour5,5.
Abstract
The targeting of protein kinases has great future potential for the design of new drugs against cardiovascular diseases (CVDs). Enormous efforts have been made toward achieving this aim. Unfortunately, kinase inhibitors designed to treat CVDs have suffered from numerous limitations such as poor selectivity, bad permeability and toxicity. So, where are we now in terms of discovering effective kinase targeting drugs to treat CVDs? Various drug design techniques have been approached for this purpose since the discovery of the inhibitory activity of Staurosporine against protein kinase C in 1986. This review aims to provide context for the status of several emerging classes of direct kinase modulators to treat CVDs and discuss challenges that are preventing scientists from finding new kinase drugs to treat heart disease.Entities:
Keywords: CaMK-II; GSK-3β; MAPK; PKC; ROCK II; cardiovascular; inhibitor; kinase inhibitor; protein kinases
Year: 2017 PMID: 29134113 PMCID: PMC5674217 DOI: 10.4155/fsoa-2017-0010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Future Sci OA ISSN: 2056-5623
The most important kinase targets that have been previously reported as kinase targets for heart disease treatment.
CVD: Cardiovascular disease.
Calcium calmodulin serine/threonine kinase IIδ inhibitors in cardiac muscle.
| 1 | Natural | 2012 | 112 µM | |
| 2 | Semisynthetic | 2012 | 1.49 µM | |
| 3 | Synthetic | 1990 | 500 nM | |
| 4 | Synthetic | 1996 | 1.57 µM | |
| 5 | Group of aryl indolyl–maleimide scaffold, synthetic inhibitors | 2008 | 10 nM to >20 µM | |
| 6 | Most active aryl indolyl–inhibitor against CaMK IIδ | 2008 | 10 nM | |
| 7 | Synthetic | 2012 | 12 nM | |
| 8 | Homology modeling synthesis of pyrimidine-based inhibitors | 2008 | 0.009–3 µM | |
| 9 | Most active pyrimidine-based inhibitor | 2008 | 9 nM | |
| 10 | Synthetic | 2012 | 2 nM | |
| 11 | Inhibitor resulted from ligand-based virtual screening CaMK IIδ inhibitor | 2011 | 20 nM | |
| 12 | Inhibitor resulted from ligand-based virtual screening CaMK IIδ inhibitor | 2011 | 82 nM | |
CaMK-IIδ: Calcium calmodulin serine/threonine kinase IIδ.
Rho kinase inhibitors.
| 13 | HTS compound | 2008 | IC50 = 7.2 nM | |
| 14 | Synthetic ‘isoquinoline prototype’ | 1997 | Ki = 330 nM | |
| 15 | Fasudil derivative approved for glaucoma treatment in Japan | 2014 | ROCK-I (IC50 = 51 nM); ROCK-II (IC50 = 19 nM) | |
| 16 | Synthetic ‘isoquinoline series’ | 1997 | Ki = 1.6 nM | |
| 17 | Synthetic ‘4-aminopyridine series’ | 1997 | ||
| 18 | Synthetic ‘pyrrolopyridine series’ | 2007 | ROCK-II (IC50 = 3.6 nM) | |
| 19 | Synthetic ‘indazole series’ | 2006 | IC50 = 13 nM | |
| 20 | Synthetic benzadioxane-based compound | 2008 | ROCK-I (IC50 = 56 nM) | |
| 21 | Tetrahydroisoquinoline-based inhibitor | 2010 | ROCK-II (IC50 <1 nM) | |
| 22 | Selective ROCK-II inhibitor | 2011 | ROCK-II (IC50 = 1.7 nM) | |
| 23 | Tricyclic pyridocarboxamide derivatives | 2015 | ROCK-II (IC50 = 1 nM) | |
| 24 | Structure-based drug design inhibitor | 2014 | IC50 = 1.5 μM | |
| 25 | Structure-based design inhibitor | 2013 | ROCK-II (IC50 = 0.02 μM) | |
| 26 | Ligand-based drug design inhibitor | 2011 | ROCK-II (IC50 = 0.02 μM) | |
HTS: High-throughput screening; ROCK: Rho kinase.
Protein kinase C inhibitors.
| 27 | Natural inhibitor (Staurosporine) | 1977, first isolated; 1986, the inhibitory activity against PKC was revealed | PKC (IC50 = 2.7 nM) | |
| 28 | Semisynthetic (K-252 a) | 1986 | IC50 = 18–25 nM | |
| 29 | Semisynthetic (K-252b) | 1986 | IC50 = 20 nM | |
| 30 | Semisynthetic, 7-oxo Staurosporine (RK –1409) | 1992 | IC50 ≈ 1 nM | |
| 31 | Natural (Calphostin C) | 1989 | IC50 = 0.05 µM | |
| 32 | Synthetic (AEB071) | 2009 | PKC-α (IC50 = 2.1 nM) PKC-ϵ (IC50 = 6.1 nM) | |
| 33 | Synthetic | 2011 | PKC-α (IC50 = 829 nM) PKC-ϵ (IC50 = 5 nM) | |
| 34 | Synthetic | 2011 | PKC-βII (Ki = 29 nM) | |
| 35 | Flosequinan-selective PKC inhibitor | 1992 | – | |
| 36 | Ruboxistaurin | 2006 | PKC-βI (IC50 = 4.7 nM) PKC-βII (IC50 = 5.9 nM) | |
PKC: Protein kinase C
MAPK inhibitors.
| 37 | Synthetic (SB 203580) | 1996 | IC50 = 0.3–0.5 µM | |
| 38 | Synthetic (SB 220025) | 1998 | IC50 = 60 nM | |
| 39 | Synthetic (RWJ 67657) | 1999 | p38α (IC50 = 1 μM) p38β (IC50 = 11 μM) | |
| 40 | Synthetic (VX-702) | 2007 | p38α (IC50 = 4–20 nM) | |
| 41 | Synthetic (Scio-469) | 2006 | p38α (IC50 = 9 nM) | |
| 42 | Synthetic Dilmapimod (SB681323) | 2005 | Under study in early phase | |
| 43 | Synthetic | 2007 | IC50 = 3 nM | |
| 44 | Synthetic | 2007 | IC50 = 3 nM | |
| 45 | BMS582949 | 2006–2015 | p38α (IC50 = 13 nM) | |
| 46 | Synthetic (VX-745) | 1999 | p38α (IC50 = 5 nM) | |
Inhibitors of glycogen synthase kinase-3β.
| 47 | Natural (hymenialdisine) | 2000 | IC50 = 0.01 µM | |
| 48 | Natural (5-iodo-indirubin-3'-monoxime) | 2001 | IC50 = 0.009 nM | |
| 49 | Synthetic (alesterpaullone) | 2000 | IC50 = 0.004 nM | |
| 50 | Synthetic (aloisine A) | 2002 | IC50 = 0.65 µM | |
| 51 | Synthetic | 2003 | IC50 = 0.018 µM | |
Five PI3K/AKT/eNOS activators.
Compound 52: resveratrol; compound 53: the cardiac glycosides (ouabain).