FLT3-PROTACs for combating AML resistance: Analytical overview on chimeric agents developed, challenges, and future perspectives.

Eur J Med Chem

Pharmaceutical Chemistry Department, Faculty of Pharmacy, Ain Shams University, Abbassia, 11566, Cairo, Egypt. Electronic address:

Published: November 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a severe form of blood cancer with a high relapse rate, as over 60% of patients treated still experience a return of the disease, highlighting the urgent need for better treatment options.
  • Targeted oncoprotein degradation, particularly using Proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) technology, offers a promising strategy to overcome drug resistance and improve outcomes for AML patients, especially those with FLT3 mutations.
  • This review discusses recent advancements in FLT3-targeting PROTACs, such as quizartinib-based and gilteritinib-based therapies, analyzing their potential benefits in addressing treatment failures in AML.

Article Abstract

The urgent and unmet medical demand of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) patients has driven the drug discovery process for expansion of the landscape of AML treatment. Despite the several agents developed for treatment of AML, more than 60 % of treated patients undergo relapse again after re-emission, thus, no complete cure for this complex disease has been reached yet. Targeted oncoprotein degradation is a new paradigm that can be employed to solve drug resistance, disease relapse, and treatment failure in complex diseases as AML, the most lethal hematological malignancy. AML is an aggressive blood cancer form and the most common type of acute leukemia, with bad outcomes and a very poor 5-year survival rate. FLT3 mutations occur in about 30 % of AML cases and FLT3-ITD is associated with poor prognosis of this disease. Prevalent FLT3 mutations include internal tandem duplication and point mutations (e.g., D835) in the tyrosine kinase domain, which induce FLT3 kinase activation and result in survival and proliferation of AML cells again. Currently approved FLT3 inhibitors suffer from limited clinical efficacy due to FLT3 reactivation by mutations, therefore, alternative new treatments are highly needed. Proteolysis-targeting chimera (PROTAC) is a bi-functional molecule that consists of a ligand of the protein of interest, FLT3 inhibitor in our case, that is covalently linked to an E3 ubiquitin ligase ligand. Upon FLT3-specific PROTAC binding to FLT3, the PROTAC can recruit E3 for FLT3 ubiquitination, which is subsequently subjected to proteasome-mediated degradation. In this review we tried to address the question if PROTAC technology has succeeded in tackling the disease relapse and treatment failure of AML. Next, we explored the latest FLT3-targeting PROTACs developed in the past few years such as quizartinib-based PROTACs, dovitinib-based PROTACs, gilteritinib-based PROTACs, and others. Then, we followed with a deep analysis of their advantages regarding potency improvement and overcoming AML drug resistance. Finally, we discussed the challenges facing these chimeric molecules with proposed future solutions to circumvent them.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmech.2024.116717DOI Listing

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