4.7 Review

Analyzing the scaffold diversity of cyclin-dependent kinase inhibitors and revisiting the clinical and preclinical pipeline

Journal

MEDICINAL RESEARCH REVIEWS
Volume 42, Issue 2, Pages 654-709

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/med.21856

Keywords

cancer; CDK inhibitors; clinical candidates; cyclin-dependent kinases; scaffold diversity; selective inhibitors

Funding

  1. Council of Scientific and Industrial Research [P90807]

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This article critically analyzed the chemical diversity of CDK inhibitors, with amino-pyrimidine being the most represented scaffold. The discussion included selectivity aspects among CDKs, dose-limiting toxicities in clinical trials, and the most advanced clinical candidates. The article also touched on the changing paradigm towards selective inhibitors and provided an overview of ATP-binding pockets of all druggable CDKs.
Kinases have gained an important place in the list of vital therapeutic targets because of their overwhelming clinical success in the last two decades. Among various clinically validated kinases, the cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK) are one of the extensively studied drug targets for clinical development. Food and Drug Administration has approved three CDK inhibitors for therapeutic use, and at least 27 inhibitors are under active clinical development. In the last decade, research and development in this area took a rapid pace, and thus the analysis of scaffold diversity is essential for future drug design. Available reviews lack the systematic study and discussion on the scaffold diversity of CDK inhibitors. Herein we have reviewed and critically analyzed the chemical diversity present in the preclinical and clinical pipeline of CDK inhibitors. Our analysis has shown that although several scaffolds represent CDK inhibitors, only the amino-pyrimidine is a well-represented scaffold. The three-nitrogen framework of amino-pyrimidine is a fundamental hinge-binding unit. Further, we have discussed the selectivity aspects among CDKs, the clinical trial dose-limiting toxicities, and highlighted the most advanced clinical candidates. We also discuss the changing paradigm towards selective inhibitors and an overview of ATP-binding pockets of all druggable CDKs. We carefully analyzed the clinical pipeline to unravel the candidates that are currently under active clinical development. In addition to the plenty of dual CDK4/6 inhibitors, there are many selective CDK7, CDK9, and CDK8/19 inhibitors in the clinical pipeline.

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