Date published: 2025-11-11

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TRIM17 Inhibitors

The chemical class of TRIM17 inhibitors includes compounds that can affect the function of TRIM17 by modulating various cellular pathways and processes. These inhibitors represent a diverse array of molecules that can perturb cellular signaling pathways, protein degradation processes, and other cellular mechanisms that TRIM17 is known or predicted to influence. For example, the proteasome inhibitors Z-Leu-Leu-Leu-al and MG132 can lead to the accumulation of proteins targeted by TRIM17, potentially altering the protein's regulatory roles. Autophagy inhibitors like Chloroquine and 3-Methyladenine can disrupt the degradation of cellular components, a process that might be modulated by TRIM17, thereby indirectly affecting its function.

In addition to these, inhibitors of signaling pathways such as SP600125, SB203580, and PD98059 can alter the activity of kinases that regulate apoptosis and stress responses, processes in which TRIM17 may play a part. By modulating these pathways, the inhibitors can change the cellular context in which TRIM17 operates. PI3K inhibitors, LY294002 and Wortmannin, target the AKT signaling pathway, which is involved in a variety of cellular functions, including growth and survival, and their influence might extend to TRIM17's activity in these areas. Moreover, compounds like Nutlin-3, which affects the p53 pathway, can alter the regulatory influence of TRIM17 on apoptosis, while roscovitine affects cell cycle progression, which TRIM17 may regulate. Inhibitors such as Olaparib, which targets DNA repair enzymes, can also modify the cellular response to DNA damage, potentially affecting the role of TRIM17 in apoptosis.

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