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Steroid sulfatase inhibitors: the current landscape

Hanan S. Anbar, Zahraa Isa, Jana J. Elounais, Mariam A. Jameel, Joudi H. Zib, Aya M. Samer, Aya F. Jawad, Mohammed I. El–Gamal

2021Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Patents30 citationsDOI

Abstract

Introduction: Steroid sulfatase (STS) enzyme is responsible for transforming the inactive sulfate metabolites of steroid sex hormones into the active free steroids. Both the deficiency and the over-expression of STS are associated with the pathophysiology of certain diseases. This article provides the readership with a comprehensive review about STS enzyme and its recently reported inhibitors.Areas covered: In the present article, we reviewed the structure, location, and substrates of STS enzyme, physiological functions of STS, and disease states related to over-expression or deficiency of STS enzyme. STS inhibitors reported during the last five years (2016-present) have been reviewed as well.Expert opinion: Irosustat is the most successful STS inhibitor drug candidate so far. It is currently under investigation in clinical trials for treatment of estrogen-dependent breast cancer. Non-steroidal sulfamate is the most favorable scaffold for STS inhibitor design. They can be beneficial for the treatment of hormone-dependent cancers and neurodegenerative disorders without significant estrogenic side effects. Moreover, dual-acting molecules (inhibitors of STS + another synergistic mechanism) can be therapeutically efficient.

Topics & Concepts

Steroid sulfataseSulfataseEnzymePharmacologySteroidMechanism (biology)DrugDrug discoveryEstrogenMedicineExpert opinionDiseaseCancerHormoneCancer researchBioinformaticsBiologyBiochemistryInternal medicineEpistemologyIntensive care medicinePhilosophyEstrogen and related hormone effectsProtein Kinase Regulation and GTPase SignalingSignaling Pathways in Disease
Steroid sulfatase inhibitors: the current landscape | Litcius