4.7 Review

Targeting p53-MDM2 interaction by small-molecule inhibitors: learning from MDM2 inhibitors in clinical trials

Journal

JOURNAL OF HEMATOLOGY & ONCOLOGY
Volume 15, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13045-022-01314-3

Keywords

p53; MDM2; Inhibitor; Multi-target; Degrader

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [8210131157]
  2. Wuxi Municipal Health Commission [Q202101, Q202167, M202167, ZH202110]
  3. Wuxi Taihu Talent Project [WXTTP2020008, WXTTP2021]
  4. Wuxi Medical Development Discipline Project [FZXK2021012]
  5. Jiangsu Research Hospital Association for Precision Medication [JY202105]

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p53, encoded by TP53 gene, is a crucial tumor suppressor and can be regulated by MDM2 through negative feedback loop. Inhibiting MDM2 to restore p53 function is a hot topic in anticancer drug development. This review focuses on the discovery, structural modification, preclinical and clinical research of MDM2 inhibitors and analyzes the potential defects in their clinical development.
p53, encoded by the tumor suppressor gene TP53, is one of the most important tumor suppressor factors in vivo and can be negatively regulated by MDM2 through p53-MDM2 negative feedback loop. Abnormal p53 can be observed in almost all tumors, mainly including p53 mutation and functional inactivation. Blocking MDM2 to restore p53 function is a hotspot in the development of anticancer candidates. Till now, nine MDM2 inhibitors with different structural types have entered clinical trials. However, no MDM2 inhibitor has been approved for clinical application. This review focused on the discovery, structural modification, preclinical and clinical research of the above compounds from the perspective of medicinal chemistry. Based on this, the possible defects in MDM2 inhibitors in clinical development were analyzed to suggest that the multitarget strategy or targeted degradation strategy based on MDM2 has the potential to reduce the dose-dependent hematological toxicity of MDM2 inhibitors and improve their anti-tumor activity, providing certain guidance for the development of agents targeting the p53-MDM2 interaction.

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