4.6 Article

ROS1 Kinase Inhibitors for Molecular-Targeted Therapies

Journal

CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 23, Issue 2, Pages 142-160

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/0929867322666151006093623

Keywords

ROS1 kinase; receptor tyrosine kinase; cancer; inhibitor; translocation

Funding

  1. Korea Institute of Science and Technology [2E22760]
  2. creative/challenging research program of National Research Foundation of Korea [NRF-2011-0028676]

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ROS1 is a pivotal transmembrane receptor protein tyrosine kinase which regulates several cellular processes like apoptosis, survival, differentiation, proliferation, cell migration, and transformation. There is increasing evidence supporting that ROS1 plays an important role in different malignancies including glioblastoma, colorectal cancer, gastric adenocarcinoma, inflammatory myofibroblastic tumor, ovarian cancer, angiosarcoma, and non small cell lung cancer; thus, ROS1 has become a potential drug discovery target. ROS1 shares about 49% sequence homology with ALK primary structure; therefore, wide range of ALK kinase inhibitors have shown in vitro inhibitory activity against ROS1 kinase. After Crizotinib approval by FDA for the management of ALK-rearranged lung cancer, ROS1-positive tumors have been focused. Although significant advancements have been achieved in understanding ROS1 function and its signaling pathways plus recent discovery of small molecules modulating ROS1 protein, a vital need of medicinal chemistry efforts is still required to produce selective and potent ROS1 inhibitors as an important therapeutic strategy for different human malignancies. This review focuses on the current knowledge about different scaffolds targeting ROS1 rearrangements, methods to synthesis, and some biological data about the most potent compounds that have delivered various scaffold structures.

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