The polypharmacology strategy of multi-targeting drugs acting on different biological pathways is capturing the researchers' attention, particularly in cancer. The simultaneous inhibition of two or more targets by drug combination… Click to show full abstract
The polypharmacology strategy of multi-targeting drugs acting on different biological pathways is capturing the researchers' attention, particularly in cancer. The simultaneous inhibition of two or more targets by drug combination or by a single 'hybrid molecule' can provide improved therapeutic efficacy when compared to the one-target inhibitors. In this regard, because of their multiple anticancer effects, histone deacetylase inhibitors have become a privileged tool for the development of hybrid drugs. The clinical trials of two multi-acting chimeras, HDAC/EGFR/HER2 and HDAC/PI3K inhibitors, encouraged the design of novel hybrids, such as compounds 22a (LSD1/HDAC) and 16a (CDK4/JAK1/HDAC), which showed superior anticancer effects than single-targeting agents or their combination both in cellular and mouse models.
               
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