Selective targeting of antiapoptotic BCL-2 proteins in cancer
Abstract
Abstract
Circumvention of apoptotic machinery is one of the distinctive properties
of carcinogenesis. Extensively established key effectors of
such apoptotic bypass mechanisms, the antiapoptotic BCL-2 (apoptosis
regulator BCL-2) proteins, determine the response of cancer
cells to chemotherapeutics. Within this background, research and
development of antiapoptotic BCL-2 inhibitors were considered to
have a tremendous amount of potential toward the discovery of
novel pharmacological modulators in cancer. In this review, milestone
achievements in the development of selective antiapoptotic
BCL-2 proteins inhibitors for BCL-2, BCL-XL (BCL-2-like protein 1),
and MCL-1 (induced myeloid leukemia cell differentiation protein
MCL-1) were summarized and their future implications were discussed.
In the first section, the design and development of BCL2/BCL-XL
dual inhibitor navitoclax, as well as the recent advances
and clinical experience with selective BCL-2 inhibitor venetoclax,
were synopsized. Preclinical data from selective BCL-XL inhibitors,
which are currently undergoing extensive testing as a single agent or
in combination with other therapeutic agents, were further summarized.
In the second section, MCL-1 inhibitors developed as potential
anticancer agents were reviewed regarding their specificity toward
MCL-1. Explicitly, studies leading to the identification of MCL-1