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Combining kinase inhibitors for optimally co‐targeting cancer and drug escape by exploitation of drug target promiscuities.

Authors :
Chen, Shangying
Yang, Sheng Yong
Zeng, Xian
Zhu, Feng
Tan, Ying
Jiang, Yu Yang
Chen, Yu Zong
Source :
Drug Development Research; Feb2021, Vol. 82 Issue 1, p133-142, 10p
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Cancers resist targeted therapeutics by drug‐escape signaling. Multitarget drugs co‐targeting cancer and drug‐escape mediators (DEMs) are clinically advantageous. DEM coverage may be expanded by drug combinations. This work evaluated to what extent the kinase DEMs (KDEMs) can be optimally co‐targeted by drug combinations based on target promiscuities of individual drugs. We focused on 41 approved and 28 clinical trial small molecule kinase inhibitor drugs with available experimental kinome and clinical pharmacokinetic data. From the kinome inhibitory profiles of these drugs, drug combinations were assembled for optimally co‐targeting an established cancer target (EGFR, HER2, ABL1, or MEK1) and 9–16 target‐associated KDEMs at comparable potency levels as that against the cancer target. Each set of two‐, three‐, and four‐drug combinations co‐target 36–71%, 44–89%, 50–88%, and 27–55% KDEMs of EGFR, HER2, ABL1, and MEK1, respectively, compared with the 36, 33, 38, and 18% KDEMs maximally co‐targeted by an existing drug or drug combination approved or clinically tested for the respective cancer. Some co‐targeted KDEMs are not covered by any existing drug or drug combination. Our work suggested that novel drug combinations may be constructed for optimally co‐targeting cancer and drug escape by the exploitation of drug target promiscuities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02724391
Volume :
82
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Drug Development Research
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
148592334
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ddr.21738