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Why Are the Majority of Active Compounds in the CNS Domain Natural Products? A Critical Analysis.

Sonali S BharateSerge MignaniRam A Vishwakarma
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2018)
Small-molecule natural products (NPs) have a long and successful track record of providing first-in-class drugs and pharmacophore (scaffolds) in all therapeutic areas, serving as a bridge between modern and traditional medicine. This trajectory has been remarkably successful in three key areas of modern therapeutics: cancers, infections, and CNS diseases. Beginning with the discovery of morphine 200 years ago, natural products have remained the primary source of new drugs/scaffolds for CNS diseases. In this perspective, we address the question: why are the majority of active compounds in the CNS domain natural products? Our analysis indicates that ∼84% approved drugs for CNS diseases are NPs or NP-inspired, and interestingly, 20 natural products provided more than 400 clinically approved CNS drugs. We have discussed unique physicochemical properties of NPs and NP-inspired vis-à-vis synthetic drugs, isoform selectivity, and evolutionary relationship, providing a rationale for increasing focus on natural product driven discovery for next-generation drugs for neurodegenerative diseases.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • blood brain barrier
  • molecular dynamics
  • drug induced
  • dna methylation
  • tissue engineering
  • structural basis
  • childhood cancer