Affiliation:
1. Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Natural Products, Central University of Punjab, Bathinda, 151401, Punjab, India
Abstract
Background:
There are eighteen members of the Poly (ADP-ribose) polymerases
(PARPs) family, which oversee various cellular processes such as maintaining the integrity of
the genome, regulating transcription, cell cycle progression, initiating the DNA damage response,
and apoptosis. PARP1 is an essential member of the PARP family and plays a crucial
role in repairing single-strand breaks in eukaryotic cells through a process called BER (base
excision repair). It is the most extensively studied and commonly found member of this family.
Area Covered:
This article discusses the advancements in developing PARP inhibitors for human
cancers. It covers the discovery of new PARP1 inhibitors with chemical classification that
selectively target multiple areas using cancer models in vitro and in vivo and evaluates them
critically. The focus is on patents that have been published from 2017 to 2023, except tankyrase
inhibitors.
Expert Opinion:
PARP1 inhibitors were developed by various companies and academic groups
from the 1990s to enhance the effectiveness of chemo and radiotherapy. However, their progress
was hindered due to their severe toxicity when combined with these treatments. Therefore,
on finding PARP1 inhibitors that can amplify the ability of chemotherapy agents to kill tumors
while causing minimal toxicity, these substances can either be used alone as part of the synthetic
lethality approach or in conjunction with radiotherapy or chemotherapy, resulting in a mutually
beneficial outcome.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.