Litcius/Paper detail

Multi-targeted drug design strategies for the treatment of schizophrenia

Piotr Stępnicki, Magda Kondej, Oliwia Koszła, Justyna Żuk, Agnieszka A. Kaczor

2020Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery27 citationsDOI

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Schizophrenia is a complex psychiatric disease (or a conglomeration of disorders) manifesting with positive, negative and cognitive symptoms. The pathophysiology of schizophrenia is not completely known; however, it involves many neurotransmitters and their receptors. In order to treat schizophrenia, drugs need to be multi-target drugs. Indeed, the action of second and third generation antipsychotics involves interactions with many receptors, belonging mainly to aminergic GPCRs. AREAS COVERED: In this review, the authors summarize current concepts of schizophrenia with the emphasis on the modern dopaminergic, serotoninergic, and glutamatergic hypotheses. Next, they discuss treatments of the disease, stressing multi-target antipsychotics. They cover different aspects of design of multi-target ligands, including the application of molecular modeling approaches for the design and benefits and limitations of multifunctional compounds. Finally, they present successful case studies of multi-target drug design against schizophrenia. EXPERT OPINION: Treatment of schizophrenia requires the application of multi-target drugs. While designing single target drugs is relatively easy, designing multifunctional compounds is a challenge due to the necessity to balance the affinity to many targets, while avoiding promiscuity and the problems with drug-likeness. Multi-target drugs bring many benefits: better efficiency, fewer adverse effects, and drug-drug interactions and better patient compliance to drug regime.

Topics & Concepts

Schizophrenia (object-oriented programming)DrugNeuroscienceDiseaseMedicineDrug actionPsychologyPsychiatryPathologyReceptor Mechanisms and SignalingPhosphodiesterase function and regulationComputational Drug Discovery Methods