Date published: 2025-9-16

1-800-457-3801

SCBT Portrait Logo
Seach Input

HYLS1 Inhibitors

The chemical class described here as HYLS1 inhibitors consists of a diverse group of compounds that target cellular processes and structures integral to centriole assembly and ciliogenesis. These inhibitors primarily focus on disrupting or stabilizing microtubules, inhibiting key kinases involved in cell cycle regulation and centrosome function, and modulating proteins specific to centriole duplication and maturation. By influencing these pathways and processes, they indirectly affect the functions associated with HYLS1. Microtubule-targeting agents like Griseofulvin, Nocodazole, Taxol, Colchicine, Vinblastine, Vincristine, and Podophyllotoxin are key players in this category. These compounds either destabilize or stabilize microtubules, components crucial for centriole structure and function. Since centrioles are essential for forming the basis of cilia, modulating microtubule dynamics can significantly impact ciliogenesis, a process potentially regulated by HYLS1.

On the other hand, kinase inhibitors such as Purvalanol A, Roscovitine (CDK inhibitors), BI 2536 (PLK1 inhibitor), and ZM-447439 (Aurora kinase inhibitor) target specific enzymes that play roles in cell cycle progression, centrosome maturation, and centriole duplication. By inhibiting these kinases, these compounds can indirectly interfere with the normal functioning of centrioles and ciliogenesis, processes in which HYLS1 is implicated. Lastly, S-Trityl-L-cysteine, an inhibitor of the mitotic kinesin Eg5, affects centrosome dynamics. Eg5 is critical for the proper functioning of centrosomes, and its inhibition can influence centriole assembly and ciliogenesis, thereby impacting the cellular functions where HYLS1 is involved. Collectively, this group of HYLS1 inhibitors, though not directly targeting HYLS1, provides a means to explore the modulation of centriolar and ciliogenesis processes. They offer a window into understanding how altering microtubule dynamics, cell cycle regulation, and specific kinase activities can indirectly impact the roles played by HYLS1 in cellular structures and functions.

SEE ALSO...

Items 231 to 11 of 11 total

Display:

Product NameCAS #Catalog #QUANTITYPriceCitationsRATING