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Cancer therapies based on targeted protein degradation — lessons learned with lenalidomide
by
Ebert, Benjamin L
, Sperling, Adam S
, Jan, Max
in
Antitumor activity
/ Blood cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cancer therapies
/ Degradation
/ Drug development
/ Fulvestrant
/ Immunomodulation
/ Immunotherapy
/ Kinases
/ Proteasomes
/ Proteins
/ Targeted cancer therapy
/ Thalidomide
/ Transcription factors
/ Ubiquitin
/ Ubiquitin-protein ligase
2021
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Cancer therapies based on targeted protein degradation — lessons learned with lenalidomide
by
Ebert, Benjamin L
, Sperling, Adam S
, Jan, Max
in
Antitumor activity
/ Blood cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cancer therapies
/ Degradation
/ Drug development
/ Fulvestrant
/ Immunomodulation
/ Immunotherapy
/ Kinases
/ Proteasomes
/ Proteins
/ Targeted cancer therapy
/ Thalidomide
/ Transcription factors
/ Ubiquitin
/ Ubiquitin-protein ligase
2021
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Cancer therapies based on targeted protein degradation — lessons learned with lenalidomide
by
Ebert, Benjamin L
, Sperling, Adam S
, Jan, Max
in
Antitumor activity
/ Blood cancer
/ Cancer
/ Cancer therapies
/ Degradation
/ Drug development
/ Fulvestrant
/ Immunomodulation
/ Immunotherapy
/ Kinases
/ Proteasomes
/ Proteins
/ Targeted cancer therapy
/ Thalidomide
/ Transcription factors
/ Ubiquitin
/ Ubiquitin-protein ligase
2021
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Cancer therapies based on targeted protein degradation — lessons learned with lenalidomide
Journal Article
Cancer therapies based on targeted protein degradation — lessons learned with lenalidomide
2021
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Overview
For decades, anticancer targeted therapies have been designed to inhibit kinases or other enzyme classes and have profoundly benefited many patients. However, novel approaches are required to target transcription factors, scaffolding proteins and other proteins central to cancer biology that typically lack catalytic activity and have remained mostly recalcitrant to drug development. The selective degradation of target proteins is an attractive approach to expand the druggable proteome, and the selective oestrogen receptor degrader fulvestrant served as an early example of this concept. Following a long and tragic history in the clinic, the immunomodulatory imide drug (IMiD) thalidomide was discovered to exert its therapeutic activity via a novel and unexpected mechanism of action: targeting proteins to an E3 ubiquitin ligase for subsequent proteasomal degradation. This discovery has paralleled and directly catalysed myriad breakthroughs in drug development, leading to the rapid maturation of generalizable chemical platforms for the targeted degradation of previously undruggable proteins. Decades of clinical experience have established front-line roles for thalidomide analogues, including lenalidomide and pomalidomide, in the treatment of haematological malignancies. With a new generation of ‘degrader’ drugs currently in development, this experience provides crucial insights into class-wide features of degraders, including a unique pharmacology, mechanisms of resistance and emerging therapeutic opportunities. Herein, we review these past experiences and discuss their application in the clinical development of novel degrader therapies.The discovery that the anticancer activity of thalidomide and its analogues, such as lenalidomide, reflects drug-induced degradation of specific target proteins has heightened interest in novel ‘degrader’ drugs. Herein, the authors review the wide and expanding use of thalidomide analogues in the treatment of multiple cancers and outline how lessons learned from this experience, particularly with lenalidomide, can guide the clinical development of new targeted protein degradation platforms.
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
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