von Ahsen Oliver, Bömer Ulf
Assay Development & High Throughput Screening, Corporate Research, Schering AG, 13342 Berlin, Germany.
Chembiochem. 2005 Mar;6(3):481-90. doi: 10.1002/cbic.200400211.
Following G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), protein kinases have become the second most important class of targets for drug discovery over the last 20 years. While only four kinase inhibitors have reached the market to date (Fasudil for rho-dependent kinase, Rapamycin for TOR, Gleevec for BCR-Abl, and Iressa for EGFR), many more are already in clinical development. A historical overview of kinase inhibitors was recently published by Cohen. [1] After the previous successes, protein kinases are now regarded as attractive, well-drugable targets, and the analysis of the human genome has yielded 518 protein kinases. [2] We can thus expect screening for protein kinase inhibitors to become even more important in the future. In this review we will focus on the early steps of drug discovery programs producing new lead compounds. We will guide the reader through efficient state-of-the-art assay development and high-throughput screening of large chemical libraries for protein kinase inhibitors.
在过去20年里,继G蛋白偶联受体(GPCRs)之后,蛋白激酶已成为药物研发中第二重要的靶点类别。尽管迄今为止只有四种激酶抑制剂已上市(用于Rho依赖性激酶的法舒地尔、用于TOR的雷帕霉素、用于BCR - Abl的格列卫以及用于EGFR的易瑞沙),但更多的激酶抑制剂已处于临床开发阶段。科恩最近发表了一篇关于激酶抑制剂的历史综述。[1] 在先前取得成功之后,蛋白激酶现在被视为有吸引力且易于成药的靶点,对人类基因组的分析已发现518种蛋白激酶。[2] 因此,我们可以预期未来对蛋白激酶抑制剂的筛选将变得更加重要。在这篇综述中,我们将重点关注产生新先导化合物的药物研发计划的早期步骤。我们将引导读者了解用于蛋白激酶抑制剂的高效的、最先进的检测方法开发以及对大型化学文库的高通量筛选。