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Allosteric Modalities for Membrane-Bound Receptors: Insights from Drug Hunting for Brain Diseases.

Quinn CoughlinAllen T HopperMaria-Jesus BlancoVijaya TirunagaruAlbert J RobichaudDario Doller
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2019)
Medicinal chemists are accountable for embedding the appropriate drug target profile into the molecular architecture of a clinical candidate. An accurate characterization of the functional effects following binding of a drug to its biological target is a fundamental step in the discovery of new medicines, informing the translation of preclinical efficacy and safety observations into human trials. Membrane-bound proteins, particularly ion channels and G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs), are biological targets prone to allosteric modulation. Investigations using allosteric drug candidates and chemical tools suggest that their functional effects may be tailored with a high degree of translational alignment, making them molecular tools to correct pathophysiological functional tone and enable personalized medicine when a causative target-to-disease link is known. We present select examples of functional molecular fine-tuning of allosterism and discuss consequences relevant to drug design.
Keyphrases
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  • adverse drug
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  • drug induced
  • single molecule
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  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • induced pluripotent stem cells