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Selective targeting of BD1 and BD2 of the BET proteins in cancer and immuno-inflammation

Authors :
Peter Ernest Soden
Emma J. Roberts
Danette L. Daniels
Chun-wa Chung
Stephen John Atkinson
Paul Bamborough
Anne Marie Michon
Johanna Vappiani
Andrea C. Haynes
Massimo Petretich
Marcus Bantscheff
Miriam M. Yeung
Matthew J Bell
Sarah-Jane Dawson
Paola Grandi
Dane Vassiliadis
Simon Taylor
James Gray
Omer Gilan
Kathy Knezevic
Marjeta Urh
Matthew J Lindon
Marian L. Burr
Rab K. Prinjha
Alex Preston
Inmaculada Rioja
Mark A. Dawson
Gerard Drewes
Thilo Werner
Christopher Roland Wellaway
Emmanuel Hubert Demont
Anna K. Bassil
Nicola Harker
Thomas Gobbetti
Enid Y.N. Lam
David F. Tough
Vinod Kumar
Source :
Science
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Bromodomain inhibitors revisited Bromodomain and extraterminal domain (BET) proteins contribute to the pathogenesis of cancer and immune diseases through their effects on transcriptional regulation. BET proteins contain two nearly identical bromodomains, BD1 and BD2, structural modules that have attracted great interest as targets for drug development. First-generation drugs that inhibited both BD1 and BD2 showed promising therapeutic activity in preclinical models but proved to be less efficacious in clinical trials. Gilan et al. took a different approach and designed drugs that selectively inhibited BD1 or BD2 (see the Perspective by Filippakopoulos and Knapp). They found that BD1 and BD2 inhibitors altered gene expression in different ways and that BD2 inhibitors had greater therapeutic activity than BD1 inhibitors in preclinical models of inflammation and autoimmune disease. Science , this issue p. 387 ; see also p. 367

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....58f230e3011891f1a84ffe803aee2fab