| Current
Pharmaceutical Design
ISSN: 1381-6128

Current Pharmaceutical Design
Volume 12, Number 31, 2006
Contents
Usefulness and Robustness of In Silico and
Experimental Technology for Drug Discovery
Executive Editors: C.B. Vicentini and S. Guccione

Editorial Pp. 3961
Protein NMR-Based Screening in Drug Discovery
Pp. 3963-3972
E.R. Zartler and M.J. Shapiro
[Abstract]
Computational Protein Design: A Novel Path to
Future Protein Drugs Pp. 3973-3997
M. Rosenberg and A. Goldblum
[Abstract]
Biomolecular Interaction Analysis in Drug Discovery
Using Surface Plasmon Resonance Technology Pp. 3999-4021
W. Huber and F. Mueller
[Abstract]
Enantiodiscrimination by NMR Spectroscopy
Pp. 4023-4045
G. Uccello-Barretta, F. Balzano and P. Salvadori
[Abstract]
General Articles
Current Status of Some Antituberculosis Drugs and the Development
of new Antituberculous Agents with Special Reference to their
In Vitro and In Vivo Antimicrobial Activities
Pp. 4047-4070
H. Tomioka
[Abstract]
CRF1 Receptors as a Therapeutic Target
for Irritable Bowel Syndrome Pp. 4071-4088
V. Martinez and Y. Taché
[Abstract]
Abstracts
[Back
to top]
Editorial
Usefulness and Robustness of In Silico and
Experimental Technology for Drug Discovery
Nothing in the world can take the place of persistence.
Talent will not; nothing is more common than
unsuccessful men with talent.
Genius will not; unrewarded genius is almost a proverb.
Education will not; the world is full of educated derelicts.
Persistence and determination alone are omnipotent.
-Calvin Coolidge (1872 – 1933)
Before a brief overview on the topics in the current issue,
feel bound to thank all the Scientists who kindly agreed to
participate in this venture with their original contributions
to this special issue, and the time and effort they have put
into these comprehensive and carefully done reviews surely
make the issue original and attractive.
We again wish to express our thanks to Professor Atta-ur-Rahman
for the invitation and to the Bentham staff for the editorial
assistance and to Prof. Pietro Cozzini (Molecular Modelling
Laboratory, Department. of General and Inorganic Chemistry,
University of Parma, Parma, Italy) for the proofreading of
some manuscripts and the critical helpful suggestions given
the Authors.
Contrary to the previous issues on "Pharmacophore
Elucidation & their use in Drugs & Design: Experimental
Structures, Conformational Analysis and 3D QSAR”,
mostly with a computational character we decided to move a
bit and invite scientists who use approaches where
the conformational problem was not the end point
but lies in the black box of a more wider context
finally leading to the “drug”.
Ideally the issue can be viewed as a kind of drug design cycle
where some approaches are employed that do not exclude but
can mutually complement each other.
The article by Edward Zartler et al. [1] on “Protein
NMR as a screening tool in drug discovery” integrates
well with both by A. Goldblum et al. [2] on “Computational
protein design” and by Walter Huber et al.
[3], which reviews on the state of art of the Surface
Plasmon Resonance (SPR) technology.
Advances in protein manipulation, whether by biological means
(labelling) or physical means (NMR), has become prominent
within the past ten years and has created a powerful method
which is able to observe ligand-target interactions in solution.
Protein based NMR methods have the advantage of supplying
detailed structural information in addition to readout of
binding events. Computational protein design has emerged in
recent years as a field that could make a substantial impact
on the design of protein drugs.
Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) technology has widespread
applications in many fields of the drug discovery process.
Protein/protein interactions can be monitored in real time
when working with biopharmaceuticals as well as protein/small
analyte interactions during hit finding, secondary screening,
lead optimization and lead selection. Equilibrium binding
constants, kinetic rate constants and thermodynamic parameters
are obtained from such studies that help to understand the
mechanism of the binding reactions. This information can be
directly used to improve binding.
The final “last but not least” article
by Gloria Uccello Baretta et al. [4] points out the
role of chirality with respect to the therapeutical and regulatory
effects of pharmaceutical products that has led to a growing
demand for reliable direct methods for monitoring stereoisomeric
products. The analysis of enantiorecognition processes involves
the detection of enantiomeric species as well as the study
of chiral discrimination mechanisms. In both fields Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy plays a fundamental
role, providing several tools, based on the use of suitable
chiral auxiliaries, for observing distinct signals of enantiomers
and for investigating the complexation phenomena involved
in enantiodiscrimination processes.
References
[1] Zartler ER, Shapiro MJ. Protein NMR-Based Screening in
Drug Discovery. Curr Pharm Des 2006; 12(31): 3963-3972.
[2] Rosenberg M, Goldblum A. Computational Protein Design:
A Novel Path to Future Protein Drugs. Curr Pharm Des 2006;
12(31): 3973-3997.
[3] Huber W, Mueller F. Biomolecular Interaction Analysis
in Drug Discovery Using Surface Plasmon Resonance Technology.
Curr Pharm Des 2006; 12(31): 3999-4021.
[4] Uccello-Barretta G, Balzano F, Salvadori P. Enantiodiscrimination
by NMR Spectroscopy. Curr Pharm Des 2006; 12(31): 4023-4045.
Chiara B. Vicentini
Dipartimento di Scienze Farmaceutiche,
-Faculty of Pharmacy-
University of Ferrara,
I-44100 Ferrara, Italy
Salvatore Guccione
Dipartimento di Scienze Farmaceutiche,
-Faculty of Pharmacy-
University of Catania,
I-95125 Catania, Italy
[Back to top]
Protein NMR-Based Screening in Drug Discovery
E.R. Zartler and M.J. Shapiro
Protein NMR as a screening tool in drug discovery
has become prominent within the past ten years. Advances in
protein manipulation, whether by biological means (labeling)
or physical means (NMR), have created a powerful method that
is able to observe ligand-target interactions in solution.
[Back to top]
Computational Protein Design: A Novel Path
to Future Protein Drugs
M. Rosenberg and A. Goldblum
Computational protein design emerges in recent years
as a field that could make a substantial impact on the design
of protein drugs. It still consists mainly of redesigning
parts of a protein sequence for increasing the stability of
a given 3-dimensional conformation of a protein, but has already
been extended from redesigning core residues to redesigning
in all other protein regions, as well as to the design of
backbone conformations. More recently, proteins with new binding
functions and new enzymes, protein libraries, designs of full
folds and of a new protein fold, have been some of the main
highlights. The search and the scoring problems are however
not fully solved, and many of the design processes should
be examined on much larger scales in order to assess their
usefulness. We examine some of the basic assumptions in computational
protein design, in particular, the separation between sequence
and scaffold designs. Among others, we suggest to include
more protein residues in computations, to include relevant
parts of the backbone, to use appropriate reference states,
to produce the proteins and to validate the designs by structural
examination of the protein products.
[Back to top]
Biomolecular Interaction Analysis in Drug
Discovery Using Surface Plasmon Resonance Technology
W. Huber and F. Mueller
The review gives first an introduction into the
basics of surface plasmon resonance technology. The physical
principle is shortly discussed followed by a discussion of
the experimental details to be considered when using this
technology for biomolecular interaction analysis. Based on
recent publications it is demonstrated that the technology
has widespread applications in many fields of the drug discovery
process. Protein/protein interactions can be monitored in
real time when working with biopharmaceuticals as well as
protein/small analyte interactions during hit finding, secondary
screening, lead optimization and lead selection. Equilibrium
binding constants, kinetic rate constants and thermodynamic
parameters are obtained from such study that helps to understand
the mechanism of the binding reactions. This information can
be directly used to improve binding properties of a drug candidate.
[Back to top]
Enantiodiscrimination by NMR Spectroscopy
G. Uccello-Barretta, F. Balzano and P. Salvadori
The analysis of enantiorecognition processes involves
the detection of enantiomeric species as well as the study
of chiral discrimination mechanisms. In both fields Nuclear
Magnetic Resonance (NMR) spectroscopy plays a fundamental
role, providing several tools, based on the use of suitable
chiral auxiliaries, for observing distinct signals of enantiomers
and for investigating the complexation phenomena involved
in enantiodiscrimination processes.
[Back to top]
Current Status of Some Antituberculosis
Drugs and the Development of new Antituberculous Agents with
Special Reference to their In Vitro and In Vivo Antimicrobial
Activities
H. Tomioka
Tuberculosis (TB) is a growing international health
concern, since it is the leading infectious cause of death
in the world today. In particular, the increasing prevalence
of multidrug-resistant (MDR)-TB has greatly contributed to
the increased difficulties in the control of TB. Because of
the global health problems of TB, the increasing rate of MDR-TB
and the high rate of a co-infection with HIV, the development
of potent new anti-TB drugs without cross-resistance with
known antimycobacterial agents is urgently needed. This article
deals with the following areas. First, it briefly reviews
some recent findings on the pharmacological status of fluoroquinolones
and rifamycin derivatives. Second, it describes other types
of new agents, such as oxazolidinones (linezolid, PNU-100480),
nitroimidazoles (nitroimidazopyran PA-824, metronidazole),
2-pyridone, riminophenazines and diarylquinolines, which are
being developed as anti-TB drugs. In addition, the future
development of new antitubercular drugs is briefly discussed
according to the potential pharmacological targets. New critical
information on the whole genome of Mycobacterium tuberculosis
(MTB) was recently elucidated and increasing knowledge on
various mycobacterial virulence genes will promote the progression
in the identification of genes that code for new drug targets.
Using such findings on MTB genome, drug development using
quantitative structure-activity relationship may be possible
in the near future.
[Back to top]
CRF1 Receptors as a Therapeutic Target
for Irritable Bowel Syndrome
V. Martinez and Y. Taché
The characterization of the corticotropin-releasing
factor (CRF) family of neuroendocrine regulatory peptides,
the cloning and pharmacological characterization of two CRF
receptor subtypes (CRF1 and CRF2), and
the development of selective CRF receptor antagonists provided
new insight to unravel the mechanisms of stress and the potential
involvement of the CRF system in different pathophysiological
conditions, including functional gastrointestinal disorders,
mainly irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), and psychopathologies
such as anxiety/depression. Compelling pre-clinical data showed
that brain CRF administration mimics acute stress-induced
colonic responses and enhances colorectal distension-induced
visceral pain in rats through CRF1 receptors. Similarly,
peripheral CRF reduced the pain threshold to colonic distension
and increased colonic motility in humans and rodents. These
observations mimic the manifestations of IBS, characterized
by abdominal bloating/discomfort and altered bowel habits.
Moreover, CRF-CRF1 pathways have been implicated
in the development of anxiety/depression. These psychopathologies,
together with stressful life events, have high comorbidity
with IBS, and are considered significant components of the
disease. From these observations, CRF1 receptors
have been suggested as a target to treat IBS. Peripherally
acting CRF1 antagonists might directly improve
IBS symptoms, as related to motility, secretion and immune
response. On the other hand, central actions will be beneficial
as to prevent the psychopathologies that co-exist with IBS
and as a way to modulate the central processing of stress-
and visceral pain-related signals. Here, we review the pre-clinical
and clinical data supporting these assumptions, and address
the efforts done at a pharmaceutical level to develop effective
therapies targeting CRF1 receptors for functional
gastrointestinal disorders.
|