Abstract

Inactivation of the function of tumor suppressor p53 is common in human cancers. In approximately half of human cancers, the tumor suppressor function of p53 is inactivated by deletion or mutation of TP53, the gene encoding p53 protein. In the remaining 50% of human cancers, p53 tumor suppressor function can be effectively inhibited by oncoprotein MDM2 or its homolog MDMX. Since inhibition of p53 by MDM2 or MDMX protein is mediated by their direct interaction with p53, small-molecule inhibitors designed to block the MDM2-p53 or MDMX-p53 protein-protein interaction (MDM2 or MDMX inhibitors) can activate p53 in tumor cells retaining wild-type p53. In the last few years, several classes of potent, selective, and efficacious small molecule MDM2 inhibitors have been designed and developed, and six such compounds are being evaluated in clinical trials as new anticancer drugs. Additionally, non-peptide, small-molecule MDMX inhibitors have been reported. We review herein the design and development of potent small-molecule MDM2 and MDMX inhibitors.

Highlights

  • Inactivation of the function of tumor suppressor p53 is common in human cancers

  • In the other 50% of human cancers, p53 retains wild-type status but its tumor suppressor function can be compromised by multiple mechanisms, and one major inhibitory mechanism is mediated by its primary cellular inhibitor, the murine double minute 2 protein (MDM2; known as HDM2 in human)

  • Amplification of MDM2 gene has been found in 7% of human cancers in an analysis of 28 different types of human cancers comprising nearly 4,000 human tumor samples, and amplification of MDM2 and mutations of p53 are mutually exclusive [23]

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Summary

REVIEW ARTICLE

Small Molecule Inhibitors of MDM2-p53 and MDMX-p53 Interactions as New Cancer Therapeutics. Comprehensive Cancer Center and Departments of Internal Medicine, Pharmacology, and Medicinal Chemistry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109, United States

Introduction
Findings
The structural basis for rational design of MDMX inhibitors
Full Text
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