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The recent advance and prospect of poly(ADP‐ribose) polymerase inhibitors for the treatment of cancer

Yi‐Ru Bai, Weiguang Yang, Rui Jia, Ju‐Shan Sun, Dandan Shen, Hong‐Min Liu, Shuo Yuan

2024Medicinal Research Reviews17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chemotherapies are commonly used in cancer therapy, their applications are limited to low specificity, severe adverse reactions, and long-term medication-induced drug resistance. Poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase (PARP) inhibitors are a novel class of antitumor drugs developed to solve these intractable problems based on the mechanism of DNA damage repair, which have been widely applied in the treatment of ovarian cancer, breast cancer, and other cancers through inducing synthetic lethal effect and trapping PARP-DNA complex in BRCA gene mutated cancer cells. In recent years, PARP inhibitors have been widely used in combination with various first-line chemotherapy drugs, targeted drugs and immune checkpoint inhibitors to expand the scope of clinical application. However, the intricate mechanisms underlying the drug resistance to PARP inhibitors, including the restoration of homologous recombination, stabilization of DNA replication forks, overexpression of drug efflux protein, and epigenetic modifications pose great challenges and desirability in the development of novel PARP inhibitors. In this review, we will focus on the mechanism, structure-activity relationship, and multidrug resistance associated with the representative PARP inhibitors. Furthermore, we aim to provide insights into the development prospects and emerging trends to offer guidance for the clinical application and inspiration for the development of novel PARP inhibitors and degraders.

Topics & Concepts

Poly ADP ribose polymeraseDNA repairSynthetic lethalityPARP inhibitorPolymeraseEpigeneticsCancerBiologyDrug resistanceHomologous recombinationMechanism (biology)Ovarian cancerCancer researchPharmacologyDNAGeneGeneticsPhilosophyEpistemologyPARP inhibition in cancer therapyDNA Repair MechanismsCRISPR and Genetic Engineering