Inhibiting
Aberrant Signal Transducer and Activator
of Transcription Protein Activation with Tetrapodal, Small Molecule
Src Homology 2 Domain Binders: Promising Agents against Multiple Myeloma
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Abstract
The
signal transducer and activator of transcription (STAT) proteins
represent a family of cytoplasmic transcription factors that regulate
a pleiotropic range of biological processes. In particular, Stat3
protein has attracted attention as it regulates the expression of
genes involved in a variety of malignant processes, including proliferation,
survival, migration, and drug resistance. Multiple myeloma (MM) is
an incurable hematologic malignancy that often exhibits abnormally
high levels of Stat3 activity. Although current treatment strategies
can improve the clinical management of MM, it remains uniformly incurable
with a dismal median survival time post-treatment of 3–4 years.
Thus, novel targeted therapeutics are critically needed to improve
MM patient outcomes. We herein report the development of a series
of small molecule Stat3 inhibitors with potent anti-MM activity <i>in vitro</i>. These compounds showed high-affinity binding to
Stat3’s SH2 domain, inhibited intracellular Stat3 phosphorylation,
and induced apoptosis in MM cell lines at low micromolar concentrations