scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Topic

Tyrosine-kinase inhibitor

About: Tyrosine-kinase inhibitor is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 7361 publications have been published within this topic receiving 292450 citations.


Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It is reported that AMN107 and BMS-354825 are 20-fold and 325-fold more potent than imatinib against cells expressing wild-type Bcr-Abl and that similar improvements are maintained for allImatinib-resistant mutants tested, with the exception of T315I.
Abstract: Imatinib, a Bcr-Abl tyrosine kinase inhibitor, is a highly effective therapy for patients with chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML). Despite durable responses in most chronic phase patients, relapses have been observed and are much more prevalent in patients with advanced disease. The most common mechanism of acquired imatinib resistance has been traced to Bcr-Abl kinase domain mutations with decreased imatinib sensitivity. Thus, alternate Bcr-Abl kinase inhibitors that have activity against imatinib-resistant mutants would be useful for patients who relapse on imatinib therapy. Two such Bcr-Abl inhibitors are currently being evaluated in clinical trials: the improved potency, selective Abl inhibitor AMN107 and the highly potent dual Src/Abl inhibitor BMS-354825. In the current article, we compared imatinib, AMN107, and BMS-354825 in cellular and biochemical assays against a panel of 16 kinase domain mutants representing >90% of clinical isolates. We report that AMN107 and BMS-354825 are 20-fold and 325-fold more potent than imatinib against cells expressing wild-type Bcr-Abl and that similar improvements are maintained for all imatinib-resistant mutants tested, with the exception of T315I. Thus, both inhibitors hold promise for treating imatinib-refractory CML.

1,068 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The slow off-rate ofGW572016 correlates with a prolonged down-regulation of receptor tyrosine phosphorylation in tumor cells and the differences in the off-rates of these drugs and the ability of GW572016 to inhibit ErbB-2 can be explained by the enzyme-inhibitor structures.
Abstract: GW572016 (Lapatinib) is a tyrosine kinase inhibitor in clinical development for cancer that is a potent dual inhibitor of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR, ErbB-1) and ErbB-2. We determined the crystal structure of EGFR bound to GW572016. The compound is bound to an inactive-like conformation of EGFR that is very different from the active-like structure bound by the selective EGFR inhibitor OSI-774 (Tarceva) described previously. Surprisingly, we found that GW572016 has a very slow off-rate from the purified intracellular domains of EGFR and ErbB-2 compared with OSI-774 and another EGFR selective inhibitor, ZD-1839 (Iressa). Treatment of tumor cells with these inhibitors results in down-regulation of receptor tyrosine phosphorylation. We evaluated the duration of the drug effect after washing away free compound and found that the rate of recovery of receptor phosphorylation in the tumor cells reflected the inhibitor off-rate from the purified intracellular domain. The slow off-rate of GW572016 correlates with a prolonged down-regulation of receptor tyrosine phosphorylation in tumor cells. The differences in the off-rates of these drugs and the ability of GW572016 to inhibit ErbB-2 can be explained by the enzyme-inhibitor structures.

1,062 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Quantitative profiling of the drugs Imatinib, dasatinib and bosutinib in K562 cells confirms known targets including ABL and SRC family kinases and identifies the receptor tyrosine kinase DDR1 and the oxidoreductase NQO2 as novel targets of imatinib.
Abstract: We describe a chemical proteomics approach to profile the interaction of small molecules with hundreds of endogenously expressed protein kinases and purine-binding proteins. This subproteome is captured by immobilized nonselective kinase inhibitors (kinobeads), and the bound proteins are quantified in parallel by mass spectrometry using isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification (iTRAQ). By measuring the competition with the affinity matrix, we assess the binding of drugs to their targets in cell lysates and in cells. By mapping drug-induced changes in the phosphorylation state of the captured proteome, we also analyze signaling pathways downstream of target kinases. Quantitative profiling of the drugs imatinib (Gleevec), dasatinib (Sprycel) and bosutinib in K562 cells confirms known targets including ABL and SRC family kinases and identifies the receptor tyrosine kinase DDR1 and the oxidoreductase NQO2 as novel targets of imatinib. The data suggest that our approach is a valuable tool for drug discovery.

998 citations

Journal Article
TL;DR: The antitumor effect of this EGFR-selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor ZD-1839 is demonstrated and a rationale for its clinical evaluation in combination with cytotoxic drugs is provided.
Abstract: Transforming growth factor alpha (TGF-alpha) is an autocrine growth factor for human cancer. Overexpression of TGF-alpha and its specific receptor, the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR), is associated with aggressive disease and poor prognosis. The EGFR has been proposed as a target for anticancer therapy. Compounds that block ligand-induced EGFR activation have been developed. ZD-1839 (Iressa) is a p.o.-active, quinazoline derivative that selectively inhibits the EGFR tyrosine kinase and is under clinical development in cancer patients. The antiproliferative activity of ZD-1839 alone or in combination with cytotoxic drugs differing in mechanism(s) of action, such as cisplatin, carboplatin, oxaliplatin, paclitaxel, docetaxel, doxorubicin, etoposide, topotecan, and raltitrexed, was evaluated in human ovarian (OVCAR-3), breast (ZR-75-1, MCF-10A ras), and colon cancer (GEO) cells that coexpress EGFR and TGF-alpha. ZD-1839 inhibited colony formation in soft agar in a dose-dependent manner in all cancer cell lines. The antiproliferative effect was mainly cytostatic. However, treatment with higher doses resulted in a 2-4-fold increase in apoptosis. A dose-dependent supra-additive increase in growth inhibition was observed when cancer cells were treated with each cytotoxic drug and ZD-1839. The combined treatment markedly enhanced apoptotic cell death induced by single-agent treatment. ZD-1839 treatment of nude mice bearing established human GEO colon cancer xenografts revealed a reversible dose-dependent inhibition of tumor growth because GEO tumors resumed the growth rate of controls at the end of the treatment. In contrast, the combined treatment with a cytotoxic agent, such as topotecan, raltitrexed, or paclitaxel, and ZD-1839 produced tumor growth arrest in all mice. Tumors grew slowly for approximately 4-8 weeks after the end of treatment, when they finally resumed a growth rate similar to controls. GEO tumors reached a size not compatible with normal life in all control mice within 4-6 weeks and in all single agent-treated mice within 6-8 weeks after GEO cell injection. In contrast, 50% of mice treated with ZD-1839 plus topotecan, raltitrexed, or paclitaxel were still alive 10, 12, and 15 weeks after cancer cell injection, respectively. These results demonstrate the antitumor effect of this EGFR-selective tyrosine kinase inhibitor and provide a rationale for its clinical evaluation in combination with cytotoxic drugs.

995 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
25 Jan 2007-Nature
TL;DR: The experimental abrogation of HER3 resistance by small interfering RNA knockdown restores potent pro-apoptotic activity to otherwise cytostatic HER TKIs, re-affirming the oncogene-addicted nature of HER2-driven tumours and the therapeutic promise of this oncoprotein target.
Abstract: Certain tyrosine kinases are overactive in many cancers, and drugs that inhibit them, such as the leukaemia treatment imatinib, can be successful. But they don't work for all tyrosine kinase-driven cancers, and new work points to a possible reason why. The kinase HER2 is frequently overactive in breast cancers and signals through another family member, HER3. Sergina et al. find that when HER2 is partially blocked by kinase inhibitors, a feedback mechanism causes an increase of active HER3 at the plasma membrane where it continues to signal cancer cell proliferation. So more effective inhibitors that block HER2 completely, and reduce HER3 activity too, may be more effective cancer therapies. Oncogenic tyrosine kinases have proved to be promising targets for the development of highly effective anticancer drugs. However, tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) against the human epidermal growth factor receptor (HER) family show only limited activity against HER2-driven breast cancers, despite effective inhibition of epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) and HER2 in vivo1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8. The reasons for this are unclear. Signalling in trans is a key feature of this multimember family and the critically important phosphatidylinositol-3-OH kinase (PI(3)K)/Akt pathway is driven predominantly through transphosphorylation of the kinase-inactive HER3 (refs 9, 10). Here we show that HER3 and consequently PI(3)K/Akt signalling evade inhibition by current HER-family TKIs in vitro and in tumours in vivo. This is due to a compensatory shift in the HER3 phosphorylation–dephosphorylation equilibrium, driven by increased membrane HER3 expression driving the phosphorylation reaction and by reduced HER3 phosphatase activity impeding the dephosphorylation reaction. These compensatory changes are driven by Akt-mediated negative-feedback signalling. Although HER3 is not a direct target of TKIs, HER3 substrate resistance undermines their efficacy and has thus far gone undetected. The experimental abrogation of HER3 resistance by small interfering RNA knockdown restores potent pro-apoptotic activity to otherwise cytostatic HER TKIs, re-affirming the oncogene-addicted nature of HER2-driven tumours and the therapeutic promise of this oncoprotein target. However, because HER3 signalling is buffered against an incomplete inhibition of HER2 kinase, much more potent TKIs or combination strategies are required to silence oncogenic HER2 signalling effectively. The biologic marker with which to assess the efficacy of HER TKIs should be the transphosphorylation of HER3 rather than autophosphorylation.

966 citations


Network Information
Related Topics (5)
Metastasis
103.6K papers, 3.4M citations
88% related
Carcinogenesis
60.3K papers, 3.1M citations
88% related
Cancer
339.6K papers, 10.9M citations
88% related
Cancer cell
93.4K papers, 3.5M citations
88% related
Breast cancer
214.3K papers, 6.4M citations
87% related
Performance
Metrics
No. of papers in the topic in previous years
YearPapers
2023685
2022417
2021398
2020424
2019392
2018390