2013-06-05T09:11:07Z
2014-04-01T22:02:19Z
2013-04
2013-06-03T15:50:42Z
In the past decades drug discovery practice has escaped from the complexity of the formerly used phenotypic screening in animals to focus on assessing drug effects on isolated protein targets in the search for drugs that exclusively and potently hit one selected target, thought to be critical for a given disease, while not affecting at all any other target to avoid the occurrence of side-effects. However, reality does not conform to these expectations, and, conversely, this approach has been concurrent with increased attrition figures in late-stage clinical trials, precisely due to lack of efficacy and safety. In this context, a network biology perspective of human disease and treatment has burst into the drug discovery scenario to bring it back to the consideration of the complexity of living organisms and particularly of the (patho)physiological environment where protein targets are (mal)functioning and where drugs have to exert their restoring action. Under this perspective, it has been found that usually there is not one but several disease-causing genes and, therefore, not one but several relevant protein targets to be hit, which do not work on isolation but in a highly interconnected manner, and that most known drugs are inherently promiscuous. In this light, the rationale behind the currently prevailing single-target-based drug discovery approach might even seem a Utopia, while, conversely, the notion that the complexity of human disease must be tackled with complex polypharmacological therapeutic interventions constitutes a difficult-torefuse argument that is spurring the development of multitarget therapies.
Article
Accepted version
English
Disseny de medicaments; Proteïnes; Interacció cel·lular; Farmacologia; Drug design; Proteins; Cell interaction; Pharmacology
Bentham Science Publishers
Versió postprint del document publicat a: http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/0929867311320130002
Current Medicinal Chemistry, 2013, vol. 20, num. 13, p. 1623-1634
http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/0929867311320130002
(c) Bentham Science Publishers, 2013