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      Developments with multi-target drugs for Alzheimer’s disease: an overview of the current discovery approaches

      1 , 1 , 1 , 1
      Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery
      Informa UK Limited

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          Multi-target-directed ligands to combat neurodegenerative diseases.

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            A perspective on multi-target drug discovery and design for complex diseases

            Diseases of infection, of neurodegeneration (such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases), and of malignancy (cancers) have complex and varied causative factors. Modern drug discovery has the power to identify potential modulators for multiple targets from millions of compounds. Computational approaches allow the determination of the association of each compound with its target before chemical synthesis and biological testing is done. These approaches depend on the prior identification of clinically and biologically validated targets. This Perspective will focus on the molecular and computational approaches that underpin drug design by medicinal chemists to promote understanding and collaboration with clinical scientists.
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              A walk through tau therapeutic strategies

              Tau neuronal and glial pathologies drive the clinical presentation of Alzheimer’s disease and related human tauopathies. There is a growing body of evidence indicating that pathological tau species can travel from cell to cell and spread the pathology through the brain. Throughout the last decade, physiological and pathological tau have become attractive targets for AD therapies. Several therapeutic approaches have been proposed, including the inhibition of protein kinases or protein-3-O-(N-acetyl-beta-D-glucosaminyl)-L-serine/threonine Nacetylglucosaminyl hydrolase, the inhibition of tau aggregation, active and passive immunotherapies, and tau silencing by antisense oligonucleotides. New tau therapeutics, across the board, have demonstrated the ability to prevent or reduce tau lesions and improve either cognitive or motor impairment in a variety of animal models developing neurofibrillary pathology. The most advanced strategy for the treatment of human tauopathies remains immunotherapy, which has already reached the clinical stage of drug development. Tau vaccines or humanised antibodies target a variety of tau species either in the intracellular or extracellular spaces. Some of them recognise the amino-terminus or carboxy-terminus, while others display binding abilities to the proline-rich area or microtubule binding domains. The main therapeutic foci in existing clinical trials are on Alzheimer’s disease, progressive supranuclear palsy and non-fluent primary progressive aphasia. Tau therapy offers a new hope for the treatment of many fatal brain disorders. First efficacy data from clinical trials will be available by the end of this decade.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery
                Expert Opinion on Drug Discovery
                Informa UK Limited
                1746-0441
                1746-045X
                May 29 2019
                September 02 2019
                June 05 2019
                September 02 2019
                : 14
                : 9
                : 879-891
                Affiliations
                [1 ] Department of Chemistry in Pharmaceutical Sciences, Faculty of Pharmacy, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain
                Article
                10.1080/17460441.2019.1623201
                31165654
                3a53d9c8-7c59-46fd-93c0-911dc8a38e3e
                © 2019
                History

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