Content area

Abstract

The dominant paradigm in drug discovery is the concept of designing maximally selective ligands to act on individual drug targets. However, many effective drugs act via modulation of multiple proteins rather than single targets. Advances in systems biology are revealing a phenotypic robustness and a network structure that strongly suggests that exquisitely selective compounds, compared with multitarget drugs, may exhibit lower than desired clinical efficacy. This new appreciation of the role of polypharmacology has significant implications for tackling the two major sources of attrition in drug development--efficacy and toxicity. Integrating network biology and polypharmacology holds the promise of expanding the current opportunity space for druggable targets. However, the rational design of polypharmacology faces considerable challenges in the need for new methods to validate target combinations and optimize multiple structure-activity relationships while maintaining drug-like properties. Advances in these areas are creating the foundation of the next paradigm in drug discovery: network pharmacology. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Network pharmacology: the next paradigm in drug discovery
Author
Hopkins, Andrew L
Pages
682-90
Publication year
2008
Publication date
Nov 2008
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
ISSN
15524450
e-ISSN
15524469
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
222693243
Copyright
Copyright Nature Publishing Group Nov 2008