Targeting the JNK Gatekeepers: Structural Evolution and Medicinal Chemistry of MKK4 and MKK7 Inhibitors

Read the full article See related articles

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

The c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) pathway is a central driver of fibrosis, inflammation, and neurodegeneration. While direct JNK inhibitors have shown therapeutic promise, achieving high isoform selectivity remains a significant medicinal chemistry challenge. Furthermore, targeting the upstream ‘gatekeepers’ MKK4 and MKK7 offers a distinct mechanism to modulate pathway output with greater precision. Consequently, medicinal chemistry efforts have shifted upstream to the dual-specificity kinases MKK4 and MKK7. This review critically evaluates the structural biology and pharmacological evolution of small-molecule inhibitors targeting these nodes. We contrast the distinct therapeutic landscapes of the two kinases: while MKK4 inhibition has emerged as a breakthrough strategy for unlocking liver regeneration (exemplified by the first-in-class clinical candidate HRX215), MKK7 inhibition is primarily pursued for its anti-fibrotic and anti-inflammatory potential. Special attention is given to structure-based design strategies, including the exploitation of the unique hinge-region cysteine (Cys218) for MKK7-specific covalent targeting and the optimization of scaffold selectivity against off-targets like BRAF. Finally, we discuss emerging modalities, such as PROTACs and dual inhibitors, outlining a roadmap for the next generation of precision therapeutics targeting the MKK–JNK axis.

Article activity feed