Date published: 2025-12-23

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USP51 Inhibitors

USP51 inhibitors are a class of chemical compounds specifically designed to target and inhibit the activity of the USP51 protein, a deubiquitinating enzyme (DUB) involved in the removal of ubiquitin from substrate proteins. Ubiquitination, a post-translational modification, plays a key role in regulating protein stability, degradation, and various cellular signaling pathways. USP51, by removing ubiquitin, reverses these modifications, influencing processes such as protein turnover and cellular signaling. Inhibitors of USP51 are engineered to interfere with its catalytic function, typically by binding to its active site, preventing the enzyme from interacting with its ubiquitinated substrates.

The design of USP51 inhibitors involves creating chemical structures that allow precise interaction with key regions of the protein, particularly the catalytic domain. These inhibitors often feature a range of chemical motifs, including aromatic and heterocyclic rings, as well as functional groups that enable them to form non-covalent interactions like hydrogen bonds, hydrophobic interactions, and van der Waals forces with the protein. Molecular modeling and structure-based design techniques are frequently used to refine these interactions, ensuring that the inhibitors fit tightly into the enzyme's binding pocket. Advanced synthetic techniques are employed to optimize the inhibitors' properties, including their binding affinity and selectivity for USP51 over other similar enzymes. The study of USP51 inhibitors provides valuable insights into the role of this deubiquitinating enzyme in cellular processes and the broader regulatory mechanisms of protein modification systems.

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