Abstract

Currently a few compounds isolated from marine sources have become drugs, mainly directed towards cancer and pain. Compounds from marine sources have exquisite potencies against eukaryotic cells, as they act as protective agents against attack by predators in the marine environment. Their toxicities act as a “double-edged sword” as they are often too toxic for direct use in humans and thus have to be chemically modified. By linking suitably modified compounds to monoclonal antibodies directed against specific epitopes in mammalian cancer cells, they can be delivered to a specific cell type in humans. This review updates and extends an article published in early 2017, demonstrating how by careful chemical modifications, highly toxic compounds, frequently peptidic in nature, can be utilized as antitumor drug candidates. The antibody-drug- conjugates (ADCs) discussed are those that are currently in clinical trials listed in the NIH Clinical Trials Registry as, “currently active, recruiting or in some cases, recently completed”. There are also some ADCs discussed that are at the advanced preclinical stage, that in some cases, are repurposing current drug entities, and the review finishes with a short discussion of the aplyronines as potential candidate warheads as a result of scalable synthetic processes.

Keywords

RepurposingDrugDrug discoveryClinical trialMonoclonal antibodyDrug repositioningComputational biologyMedicineBiologyPharmacologyBioinformaticsAntibodyImmunologyEcology

MeSH Terms

AnalgesicsAntineoplastic AgentsHumansImmunoconjugatesMarine ToxinsNeoplasmsPain

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2019
Type
review
Volume
17
Issue
6
Pages
324-324
Citations
45
Access
Closed

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

45
OpenAlex
3
Influential
43
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Cite This

David Newman (2019). The “Utility” of Highly Toxic Marine-Sourced Compounds. Marine Drugs , 17 (6) , 324-324. https://doi.org/10.3390/md17060324

Identifiers

DOI
10.3390/md17060324
PMID
31159276
PMCID
PMC6627392

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%