Akt inhibitors are a class of compounds designed to selectively target and inhibit the activity of the serine/threonine-specific protein kinase B, commonly known as Akt. Akt plays a central role in various cellular processes, including metabolism, proliferation, cell survival, growth, and angiogenesis, by transmitting signals within the cell. It is a part of the phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K) signaling pathway and is activated by the phosphorylation of its threonine and serine residues. Akt has three isoforms Akt1, Akt2, and Akt3 each with distinct and overlapping roles in cells. Inhibitors of Akt are molecules that bind to the kinase domain of Akt, typically at the ATP binding site, and prevent its phosphorylation activity, thereby blocking the subsequent signaling cascade that Akt would normally propagate.The development of Akt inhibitors requires a comprehensive understanding of the kinase's structure and the conformational changes it undergoes upon activation. High-resolution structural analysis techniques, such as X-ray crystallography and cryo-electron microscopy, can provide detailed insights into the binding pockets and active sites of Akt. With this information, medicinal chemists can design small-molecule inhibitors that fit into these sites, mimicking the structure of ATP, the kinase's natural substrate, or allosteric inhibitors that bind to regions of Akt away from the active site, inducing conformational changes that render the enzyme inactive. Such design strategies must account for the highly conserved nature of kinase domains across the kinase family, necessitating a high degree of specificity to avoid cross-reactivity with other kinases.