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      Multi-target pharmacology: possibilities and limitations of the “skeleton key approach” from a medicinal chemist perspective

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          Abstract

          Multi-target drugs have raised considerable interest in the last decade owing to their advantages in the treatment of complex diseases and health conditions linked to drug resistance issues. Prospective drug repositioning to treat comorbid conditions is an additional, overlooked application of multi-target ligands. While medicinal chemists usually rely on some version of the lock and key paradigm to design novel therapeutics, modern pharmacology recognizes that the mid- and long-term effects of a given drug on a biological system may depend not only on the specific ligand-target recognition events but also on the influence of the repeated administration of a drug on the cell gene signature. The design of multi-target agents usually imposes challenging restrictions on the topology or flexibility of the candidate drugs, which are briefly discussed in the present article. Finally, computational strategies to approach the identification of novel multi-target agents are overviewed.

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          Most cited references36

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          Multi-target therapeutics: when the whole is greater than the sum of the parts.

          Drugs designed to act against individual molecular targets cannot usually combat multigenic diseases such as cancer, or diseases that affect multiple tissues or cell types such as diabetes and immunoinflammatory disorders. Combination drugs that impact multiple targets simultaneously are better at controlling complex disease systems, are less prone to drug resistance and are the standard of care in many important therapeutic areas. The combination drugs currently employed are primarily of rational design, but the increased efficacy they provide justifies in vitro discovery efforts for identifying novel multi-target mechanisms. In this review, we discuss the biological rationale for combination therapeutics, review some existing combination drugs and present a systematic approach to identify interactions between molecular pathways that could be leveraged for therapeutic benefit.
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            The role of ligand efficiency metrics in drug discovery.

            The judicious application of ligand or binding efficiency metrics, which quantify the molecular properties required to obtain binding affinity for a drug target, is gaining traction in the selection and optimization of fragments, hits and leads. Retrospective analysis of recently marketed oral drugs shows that they frequently have highly optimized ligand efficiency values for their targets. Optimizing ligand efficiency metrics based on both molecular mass and lipophilicity, when set in the context of the specific target, has the potential to ameliorate the inflation of these properties that has been observed in current medicinal chemistry practice, and to increase the quality of drug candidates.
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              Magic shotguns versus magic bullets: selectively non-selective drugs for mood disorders and schizophrenia.

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Journal
                Front Pharmacol
                Front Pharmacol
                Front. Pharmacol.
                Frontiers in Pharmacology
                Frontiers Media S.A.
                1663-9812
                22 September 2015
                2015
                : 6
                : 205
                Affiliations
                Medicinal Chemistry, Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Exact Sciences, National University of La Plata , La Plata, Argentina
                Author notes

                Edited by: Thomas J. Anastasio, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, USA

                Reviewed by: Joel D. A. Tyndall, University of Otago, New Zealand; Maria G. Morgese, University of Foggia, Italy

                *Correspondence: Alan Talevi, Medicinal Chemistry, Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Exact Sciences, National University of La Plata, 47 and 115 Street, La Plata B1900AVV, Argentina, atalevi@ 123456biol.unlp.edu.ar , alantalevi@ 123456gmail.com

                This article was submitted to Experimental Pharmacology and Drug Discovery, a section of the journal Frontiers in Pharmacology.

                Article
                10.3389/fphar.2015.00205
                4585027
                26441661
                62ec15c5-c9a2-4a0a-8de1-2fcd2e6c8e82
                Copyright © 2015 Talevi.

                This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) or licensor are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

                History
                : 20 June 2015
                : 04 September 2015
                Page count
                Figures: 2, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 48, Pages: 7, Words: 5076
                Categories
                Pharmacology
                Perspective

                Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical medicine
                multi-target agents,lock and key paradigm,gene profile,drug resistance,drug repositioning,drug design,designed multiple ligands

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