Date published: 2025-9-24

1-800-457-3801

SCBT Portrait Logo
Seach Input

FAM14A Inhibitors

Chemical inhibitors of FAM14A can exert their inhibitory action through several distinct cellular pathways. Staurosporine is a potent protein kinase inhibitor that can suppress the activity of kinases responsible for the phosphorylation of FAM14A, leading to its functional inhibition. Genistein, another kinase inhibitor, specifically inhibits tyrosine kinases that are likely involved in the phosphorylation state and subsequent activation of FAM14A. Similarly, Bisindolylmaleimide I targets protein kinase C, which plays a role in regulating FAM14A activity through phosphorylation signaling pathways. LY294002, by blocking PI3K, disrupts the Akt pathway signaling, which can lead to a reduction in FAM14A activity, as Akt is known to regulate a multitude of proteins including FAM14A.

Additional chemical inhibitors operate by selectively targeting kinases within major signaling cascades that control cell growth and survival, which are pathways FAM14A may be involved in. PD98059 and U0126 specifically inhibit MEK1/2, thereby potentially reducing FAM14A activity through the suppression of downstream ERK signaling pathways. SP600125 inhibits JNK, affecting another pathway that could regulate FAM14A activity. SB203580's inhibition of p38 MAP kinase further supports the notion that MAP kinase pathways are crucial for the regulation of FAM14A activity. Wortmannin presents a broader approach, inhibiting PI3K and other kinases, potentially reducing the phosphorylation state of FAM14A. Rapamycin's inhibition of mTOR indicates a mechanism where the protein's activity is influenced due to mTOR's role in cell growth and survival signaling. PP2, as a Src family kinase inhibitor, can decrease the activity of kinases that regulate FAM14A, while Dasatinib's inhibition of Src family kinases and c-KIT suggests a multi-kinase approach to regulating the pathways involved in FAM14A activity. These inhibitors collectively underscore the complex regulation of FAM14A through multiple phosphorylation-dependent pathways.

Items 701 to 12 of 12 total

Display:

Product NameCAS #Catalog #QUANTITYPriceCitationsRATING