Chemical inhibitors of MAP3K6 can act through various points within the MAPK signaling cascade to achieve functional inhibition. SP600125, a known JNK inhibitor, targets a downstream kinase in the MAPK pathway that MAP3K6 feeds into. By inhibiting JNK, SP600125 effectively disrupts the signaling relay that would normally result from MAP3K6 activation, leading to a cessation of downstream effects that MAP3K6 would typically promote. Similarly, PD98059 and U0126 are inhibitors of MEK, another kinase that operates downstream of MAP3K6. These compounds prevent MEK from activating ERK, which is a key player in the MAPK pathway. This interruption in the signaling cascade results in an indirect functional inhibition of MAP3K6, as the pathway's flow is hindered, preventing MAP3K6 from exerting its normal biological effects.
Further along the lines of indirect inhibition, compounds like SB203580, BIRB 796, and LY2228820 target p38 MAP kinase, disrupting the signaling pathway at a point downstream of MAP3K6. By preventing p38 MAPK's activity, these inhibitors negate the influence of MAP3K6 in stress response and cytokine production. Kinase inhibitors with broader spectra, such as Sorafenib, Sunitinib, Dasatinib, Gefitinib, Erlotinib, and Lapatinib, can functionally inhibit MAP3K6 by targeting other kinases and receptors that are either part of or interact with the MAPK pathway. For instance, Sorafenib's activity against Raf kinases and Sunitinib's impact on receptor tyrosine kinases can result in a decrease in MAP3K6 activity due to the fact that these kinases are upstream regulators of the MAPK pathway. Dasatinib's inhibition of Src family kinases, and the EGFR inhibition by Gefitinib, Erlotinib, and Lapatinib, all lead to a dampening of the signaling that would normally activate MAP3K6, thereby functionally inhibiting the protein by preventing its usual cellular response.
SEE ALSO...
Items 251 to 12 of 12 total
Display:
| Product Name | CAS # | Catalog # | QUANTITY | Price | Citations | RATING |
|---|