The increasing population will challenge healthcare, particularly because the worldwide population has never been older. Therapeutic solutions to age-related disease will be increasingly critical. Kinases are key regulators of human health and represent promising therapeutic targets for novel drug candidates. The dual-specificity tyrosine-regulated kinase (DYRKs) family is of particular interest and, among them, DYRK1A has been implicated ubiquitously in varied human diseases. Herein, we focus on the characteristics of DYRK1A, its regulation and functional role in different human diseases, which leads us to an overview of future research on this protein of promising therapeutic potential.
Glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) is an aggressive stage IV brain cancer that is difficult to detect, typically inoperable, and associated with a poor prognosis. Challenges in targeting GBM arise from the involvement of various pro-survival pathways, being comprised of four different cellular states, and displaying heterogeneity between each tumor. Marketed FDA-approved drugs for GBM have demonstrated limited efficacy, toxicity issues, resistance, and poor BBB penetrance. Further probing into pathway breakdowns led to the discovery of the DYRKs (dual-specificity tyrosine-regulated kinase), CLKs (CDC-like kinases), PDGFRA/B (platelet-derived growth factor receptor), and PI3Kα (phosphoinositide 3-kinase) involvement and overexpression. The upregulation of these kinases are found to be prominently involved in GBM cell proliferation, survival, replication, aggression, metastasis, and resistance. Herein, we believe that the development of pleiotropic competitive inhibitors for the treatment of GBM could be a promising therapeutic option based on literature precedence and current data from research. DYR726, a water-soluble, pleiotropic inhibitor [IC50 PDGFRA/B/PI3Kα/CLk2/3DYRK1a/2/3 ( 53.0/48.0/6.2/15.13/137/4/38.6/11.2 nM)] has demonstrated in vitro cellular efficacy across various GBM cell lines. When treated in non-cancerous cell lines, DYR726 displayed an optimal therapeutic window, which is not observed in any glioma drugs currently in clinical trials. At 1µM concentrations, complete dissociation of the formation of neural stem cells and neurosphere growth in glioma cells are observed. Reduction in metastasis and proliferation are found when treated with DYR726 over three weeks. In vitro efficacy against current approved FDA treatment options and clinical candidates has been extensively tested across numerous GBM cell lines. When benched against one of the best PI3K kinase inhibitors in the clinic, Buparlisib, DYR726 was comparable, indicating a disruption in the RTK signaling survival pathway that is commonly associated with GBM. DYR726 performed favorably against Avapritinib (clinical trials for gliomas are beginning at Stanford) and when treated against FDA-approved combination treatment Dabrafenib+Trametinib (for 2% of glioma patients), it performed identically, suggesting that DYR726 can inhibit the cells at the same rate as the new FDA drug. Within patient-derived cell lines, it behaves identically to Buparlisib, and DYR726 has been shown to outperform AstraZenecas’ Osimertinib (which was significantly less potent) and Tafinlars’ Dabrafenib (displayed no effect). Based on the significance of efficacy, this series is on the CRUK Glasgow Cancer Center grant renewal as a potential Phase 0 within the next five years. Citation Format: Alessandra Fistrovich, Vasudah Tandon, Carly Cabel, Laura Basantes, Curtis Thorne, William Montfort, Sourav Banerjee, Christopher Hulme. The development of pleotropic small molecule kinase inhibitors (SKMIs) for the treatment of glioblastoma multiforme (GBM) [abstract]. In: Proceedings of the American Association for Cancer Research Annual Meeting 2023; Part 1 (Regular and Invited Abstracts); 2023 Apr 14-19; Orlando, FL. Philadelphia (PA): AACR; Cancer Res 2023;83(7_Suppl):Abstract nr 3100.
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