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Polypharmacology of dopamine receptor ligands

Butini, Stefania; Nikolić, Katarina; Kassel, S.; Brueckmann, H.; Filipić, Slavica; Agbaba, Danica; Gemma, S.; Brogi, S.; Brindisi, M.; Campiani, G.; Stark, Holger

(Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, Oxford, 2016)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Butini, Stefania
AU  - Nikolić, Katarina
AU  - Kassel, S.
AU  - Brueckmann, H.
AU  - Filipić, Slavica
AU  - Agbaba, Danica
AU  - Gemma, S.
AU  - Brogi, S.
AU  - Brindisi, M.
AU  - Campiani, G.
AU  - Stark, Holger
PY  - 2016
UR  - https://farfar.pharmacy.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/2738
AB  - Most neurological diseases have a multifactorial nature and the number of molecular mechanisms discovered as underpinning these diseases is continuously evolving. The old concept of developing selective agents for a single target does not fit with the medical need of most neurological diseases. The development of designed multiple ligands holds great promises and appears as the next step in drug development for the treatment of these multifactorial diseases. Dopamine and its five receptor subtypes are intimately involved in numerous neurological disorders. Dopamine receptor ligands display a high degree of cross interactions with many other targets including G-protein coupled receptors, transporters, enzymes and ion channels. For brain disorders like Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia and depression the dopaminergic system, being intertwined with many other signaling systems, plays a key role in pathogenesis and therapy. The concept of designed multiple ligands and polypharmacology, which perfectly meets the therapeutic needs for these brain disorders, is herein discussed as a general ligand-based concept while focusing on dopaminergic agents and receptor subtypes in particular.
PB  - Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, Oxford
T2  - Progress in Neurobiology
T1  - Polypharmacology of dopamine receptor ligands
VL  - 142
SP  - 68
EP  - 103
DO  - 10.1016/j.pneurobio.2016.03.011
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Butini, Stefania and Nikolić, Katarina and Kassel, S. and Brueckmann, H. and Filipić, Slavica and Agbaba, Danica and Gemma, S. and Brogi, S. and Brindisi, M. and Campiani, G. and Stark, Holger",
year = "2016",
abstract = "Most neurological diseases have a multifactorial nature and the number of molecular mechanisms discovered as underpinning these diseases is continuously evolving. The old concept of developing selective agents for a single target does not fit with the medical need of most neurological diseases. The development of designed multiple ligands holds great promises and appears as the next step in drug development for the treatment of these multifactorial diseases. Dopamine and its five receptor subtypes are intimately involved in numerous neurological disorders. Dopamine receptor ligands display a high degree of cross interactions with many other targets including G-protein coupled receptors, transporters, enzymes and ion channels. For brain disorders like Parkinson's disease, schizophrenia and depression the dopaminergic system, being intertwined with many other signaling systems, plays a key role in pathogenesis and therapy. The concept of designed multiple ligands and polypharmacology, which perfectly meets the therapeutic needs for these brain disorders, is herein discussed as a general ligand-based concept while focusing on dopaminergic agents and receptor subtypes in particular.",
publisher = "Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, Oxford",
journal = "Progress in Neurobiology",
title = "Polypharmacology of dopamine receptor ligands",
volume = "142",
pages = "68-103",
doi = "10.1016/j.pneurobio.2016.03.011"
}
Butini, S., Nikolić, K., Kassel, S., Brueckmann, H., Filipić, S., Agbaba, D., Gemma, S., Brogi, S., Brindisi, M., Campiani, G.,& Stark, H.. (2016). Polypharmacology of dopamine receptor ligands. in Progress in Neurobiology
Pergamon-Elsevier Science Ltd, Oxford., 142, 68-103.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pneurobio.2016.03.011
Butini S, Nikolić K, Kassel S, Brueckmann H, Filipić S, Agbaba D, Gemma S, Brogi S, Brindisi M, Campiani G, Stark H. Polypharmacology of dopamine receptor ligands. in Progress in Neurobiology. 2016;142:68-103.
doi:10.1016/j.pneurobio.2016.03.011 .
Butini, Stefania, Nikolić, Katarina, Kassel, S., Brueckmann, H., Filipić, Slavica, Agbaba, Danica, Gemma, S., Brogi, S., Brindisi, M., Campiani, G., Stark, Holger, "Polypharmacology of dopamine receptor ligands" in Progress in Neurobiology, 142 (2016):68-103,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pneurobio.2016.03.011 . .
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