Navitoclax (ABT-263)
Navitoclax (ABT-263) is an orally bioavailable BH3 mimetic that inhibits BCL-2, BCL-xL, and BCL-W by binding their BH3-interaction groove and displacing pro-apoptotic effectors BAX and BAK, triggering the intrinsic apoptosis pathway. Senescent cells upregulate BCL-2 family members through their anti-apoptotic programme (SCAP); navitoclax exploits this as a senolytic. Chang et al. (Nature Medicine, 2016) showed oral ABT-263 depleted senescent hematopoietic stem cells in irradiated and naturally aged mice and restored self-renewal, providing the first in vivo evidence of pharmacological senolysis with tissue benefit. The primary obstacle is BCL-xL-dependent thrombocytopenia: platelets depend almost exclusively on BCL-xL for survival. Gandhi et al. (JCO, 2011, Phase I) found this dose-limiting at 325 mg/day continuous or 350 mg intermittent; Rudin et al. (Clin Cancer Res, 2012, Phase II) recorded Grade III-IV thrombocytopenia in 41% of patients. BCL-xL-directed PROTACs such as DT2216 and PZ15227 exploit low E3-ligase expression in platelets for comparable senolytic activity with reduced toxicity (Skwarska and Konopleva, Cancer Research, 2023). As of mid-2026, navitoclax has not entered trials for senescence clearance in healthy individuals.
Sources
- Chang J, Wang Y, Shao L, et al.. (2016). Clearance of senescent cells by ABT263 rejuvenates aged hematopoietic stem cells in mice. *Nature Medicine*doi:10.1038/nm.4010
- Gandhi L, Camidge DR, de Oliveira MR, et al.. (2011). Phase I Study of Navitoclax (ABT-263), a Novel Bcl-2 Family Inhibitor, in Patients With Small-Cell Lung Cancer and Other Solid Tumors. *Journal of Clinical Oncology*doi:10.1200/JCO.2010.31.6208
- Rudin CM, Hann CL, Garon EB, et al.. (2012). Phase II Study of Single-Agent Navitoclax (ABT-263) and Biomarker Correlates in Patients with Relapsed Small Cell Lung Cancer. *Clinical Cancer Research*doi:10.1158/1078-0432.CCR-11-3090
- Skwarska A, Konopleva M. (2023). BCL-xL Targeting to Induce Apoptosis and to Eliminate Chemotherapy-Induced Senescent Tumor Cells: From Navitoclax to Platelet-Sparing BCL-xL PROTACs. *Cancer Research*doi:10.1158/0008-5472.CAN-23-2804
