Affiliation:
1. Chitkara College of Pharmacy, Chitkara University, Punjab, India
2. School of Pharmacy, Sharda University, Greater
Noida, Gautam Buddha Nagar 201306, Uttar Pradesh, India
Abstract
Abstract:
The treatment measures of malignant carcinomas are most important for human health. In
recent years the use of targeted therapy based on small molecule compounds and identical immunoglobulin
has been the most frequently used tool to combat cancerous cells. But there are still several
limitations in their clinical development and applications, including their ability to bind multiple molecular
target sites, both cell surface receptors and intracellular proteins, promoting a greater risk of
toxicity. PROTAC is a novel technology that maintains a balance between protein synthesis and degradation
and uses molecules instead of conventional enzyme inhibitors, containing two active domains
and a linker to destroy unwanted selective protein (like kinase, skeleton protein and regulatory protein).
PROTACs are heterobifunctional nano molecules with a size range of about 10 nanometres that
eliminate the protein complexes formed by protein-protein interaction through large and flat surfaces
generally defined as “undruggable” in conventional drug delivery systems, which include around 85%
of proteins present in humans, suggesting their wide application in the field of drug development.
Such peptide-based PROTACs have successfully shown targets' destruction in cultured cells (e.g.,
MetAP-2, and FKBP12F36V, receptors for estrogens and androgen). However, some obstacles prevent
this technology from transferring from the laboratory to its actual clinical utility, such as delivery system
and bioavailability. The scope of the presented review is to give an overview of novel PROTAC
technology with its limitations, advantages, mechanism of action, and development of photocontrolled
PROTACs and to summarize its futuristic approach to targeting proteins in cancer cells.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Cited by
2 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献