Litcius/Paper detail

Targeting the “Undruggable”: Small-Molecule Inhibitors of Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen (PCNA) in the Spotlight in Cancer Therapy

Tiantian Wang, Zengtao Wang

2025Journal of Medicinal Chemistry11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

PCNA plays multiple roles in cancer development, including cell proliferation regulation, DNA repair, replication, and serving as a widely used biomarker and therapeutic target. Despite its significant role in oncology, PCNA has historically been considered “undruggable” due to the absence of known endogenous small molecule modulators and identifiable ligand binding sites. Unlike other protein–protein interfaces, PCNA lacks explicit binding grooves, featuring a relatively small and shallow surface pocket, which hinders the discovery of traditional small molecule targets. Recent breakthroughs have introduced promising PCNA-targeting candidates, with ATX-101 and AOH1996 entering phase I clinical trials for cancer therapy, garnering academic and industry interest. These achievements provide new evidence for PCNA as a drug target. This article provides insight and perspective on the application of small-molecule PCNA inhibitors in cancer treatment, covering PCNA function, its relationship with cancer, structural modification of small molecule inhibitors, and discovery strategies.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryProliferating cell nuclear antigenCancer researchSmall moleculeCancerAntigenComputational biologyCell growthBiochemistryGeneticsBiologyDNA Repair MechanismsCancer-related Molecular PathwaysAcute Lymphoblastic Leukemia research
Targeting the “Undruggable”: Small-Molecule Inhibitors of Proliferating Cell Nuclear Antigen (PCNA) in the Spotlight in Cancer Therapy | Litcius