Aurora Kinase
Aurora kinases are a family of serine-threonine kinases of three highly homologous members, including aurora A kinase, aurora B kinase and aurora C kinase, which are responsible for chromosome assembly and segregation during mitosis. Aurora kinases are characterized by two domains: a regulatory domain in the NH2 terminus and a catalytic domain in the COOH terminus, in which an A-Box and a D-Box found correspondingly in each domain are responsible for protein degradation. Aurora A kinase plays an important role in centrosome function and duplication, mitotic entry and bipolar spindle assembly; while Aurora B kinase is the catalytic component of the chromosomal passenger complex regulating the accurate segregation of the chromatids at mitosis, histone modification and cytokinesis. Aurora C kinase is less studied and expressed restrictedly in the testes.
- A4130 ENMD-2076Target: Aurora Kinases|FLT3|RET|Src|VEGFR3/FLT4|NTRK1/TRKA|CSF-1R/c-FmsSummary: Selective Aurora A/Flt3 inhibitor
- A4124 TAK-901Target: Aurora Kinases|FLT3|Src|JAK|LRRK2|Hck|FGR|YES|Fyn|ARGSummary: Novel Aurora A/B inhibitor
- A4125 CYC116Target: Aurora Kinases|FLT3|VEGFRSummary: Potent Aurora A/B inhibitor