Turning a Drug Target into a Drug Candidate: A New Paradigm for Neurological Drug Discovery?
Steven D BuckinghamHarry-Jack MannOlivia K HearndenDavid B SattellePublished in: BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology (2020)
The conventional paradigm for developing new treatments for disease mainly involves either the discovery of new drug targets, or finding new, improved drugs for old targets. However, an ion channel found only in invertebrates offers the potential of a completely new paradigm in which an established drug target can be re-engineered to serve as a new candidate therapeutic agent. The L-glutamate-gated chloride channels (GluCls) of invertebrates are absent from vertebrate genomes, offering the opportunity to introduce this exogenous, inhibitory, L-glutamate receptor into vertebrate neuronal circuits either as a tool with which to study neural networks, or a candidate therapy. Epileptic seizures can involve L-glutamate-induced hyper-excitation and toxicity. Variant GluCls, with their inhibitory responses to L-glutamate, when engineered into human neurons, might counter the excitotoxic effects of excess L-glutamate. In reviewing recent studies on model organisms, it appears that this approach might offer a new paradigm for the development of candidate therapeutics for epilepsy.
Keyphrases
- drug discovery
- drug induced
- neural network
- small molecule
- endothelial cells
- adverse drug
- spinal cord
- oxidative stress
- emergency department
- high throughput
- mesenchymal stem cells
- diabetic rats
- cerebral ischemia
- blood brain barrier
- single cell
- pluripotent stem cells
- binding protein
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- electronic health record