| Current
Medicinal Chemistry
ISSN: 0929-8673

Current Medicinal Chemistry
Volume 16, Number 26, 2009
Contents
Use and Safety of Calcium Channel Blockers in Obstetrics Pp.
3330-3340
Andrea L. Tranquilli and Stefano R.
Giannubilo
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Article]
The L-Type Ca2+
Channel as a Therapeutic Target in Heart Disease
Pp. 3341-3358
H.M. Viola, W.A. Macdonald, H. Tang and L.C.
Hool
[Abstract] [Purchase
Article]
Translocator Protein Ligands as Promising
Therapeutic Tools for Anxiety Disorders Pp.
3359-3380
S. Taliani, F. Da Settimo, E. Da Pozzo,
B. Chelli and C. Martini
[Abstract] [Purchase
Article]
Conformational Sampling and Energetics
of Drug-Like Molecules Pp. 3381-3413
Nicolas Foloppe and I-Jen Chen
[Abstract] [Purchase
Article]
Prenylated Isoflavonoids: Botanical Distribution,
Structures, Biological Activities and Biotechnological Studies
an update (1995–2006) Pp. 3414-3468
Bruno Botta Pilar Menendez, Giovanni Zappia,
Roberto Alves de Lima, Roberta Torge and Giuliano
Delle Monache
[Abstract] [Purchase
Article]
Abstracts

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Use and Safety of Calcium Channel Blockers in Obstetrics
Andrea L. Tranquilli and Stefano R.
Giannubilo
Calcium-Channel Blockers (CCBs), or calcium antagonists,
are a heterogeneous group of drugs that produce cardiovascular
effects by preventing the influx of calcium ions through L-type
voltage-dependent calcium channels in specialized electrical
system and conduction tissue cells, like myocardial and vascular
smooth muscle cells.
In recent years, CCBs have found their way in obstetrics and
gynecology, especially in the management of hypertensive disorders
of pregnancy and preterm labor.
The lack of adequate data had created uncertainty about the
safety of CCBs in pregnancy. Teratogenicity with these agents
has been demonstrated in animals, but no cases of possible
human malformation or deformity have been reported. Data from
human studies suggest that CCBs may cause a clinically insignificant
fall in maternal mean arterial pressure, but have little to
no effect on uterine perfusion. In many countries, CCBs remain
unlicensed for use in pregnancy and it is unlikely the manufacturers
will ever apply for this status to change.
We do believe that this is the situation of CCBs for those
critical second- and third-trimester conditions such as Gestational
hypertension, Preeclampsia, HELLP syndrome and preterm labor.
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The L-Type Ca2+ Channel as
a Therapeutic Target in Heart Disease
H.M. Viola, W.A. Macdonald, H. Tang and L.C.
Hool
The L-type Ca2+ channel
plays a critical role in cardiac function as the main route
for entry of calcium into cardiac myocytes. It is essential
to excitability as it shapes the long plateau phase of the
cardiac action potential that is unique to cardiac ventricular
myocytes. It is necessary for contraction as it triggers the
release of calcium from sarcoplasmic reticulum stores for
actin-myosin interaction. The L-type Ca2+
channel also regulates cytoplasmic calcium levels. It is well
recognized that an increase in intracellular calcium is involved
in the activation of growth-promoting signal pathways. Recently,
reactive oxygen species have been implicated in the activation
of signal pathways and the development of pathological hypertrophy.
There is now evidence that implicates activation of the L-type
Ca2+ channel with persistent
alterations in calcium homeostasis and cellular reactive oxygen
species production as a possible trigger of cardiac hypertrophy.
A number of different approaches have been used to modify
channel function with the view to preventing ischemia-reperfusion
injury, cardiac hypertrophy or cardiac failure providing good
evidence that the L-type Ca2+
channel may be an efficacious target in the prevention of
cardiac pathology.
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Translocator Protein Ligands as Promising Therapeutic Tools
for Anxiety Disorders
S. Taliani, F. Da Settimo, E. Da Pozzo,
B. Chelli and C. Martini
The Translocator protein (TSPO), formerly known as the
peripheral-type benzodiazepine receptor, is an 18 kDa mitochondrial
protein primarily involved in steroid biosynthesis in both
peripheral and glial cells. It has been extensively reported
that TSPO regulates the rate-limiting translocation of cholesterol
from the outer to the inner mitochondrial membrane before
its transformation by cytochrome P450scc
into pregnenolone, which is further converted into an array
of different steroids.
In the brain, neurosteroids such as allopregnanolone and pregnenolone,
acting as positive modulators of γ-aminobutyric
type A (GABAA) receptors,
exert anxiolytic activity.
Specific ligands targeting TSPO increase neurosteroid production
and for this reason they have been suggested to play an important
role in anxiety modulation. Unlike benzodiazepines (Bzs),
which represent the most common anti-anxiety drugs administered
around the world, selective TSPO ligands have shown anxiolytic
effects in animal models without any of the side effects associated
with Bzs. Therefore, specific TSPO ligands that are able to
promote neurosteroidogenesis may represent the future of therapeutic
treatment of anxiety disorders. Furthermore, TSPO expression
levels are altered in several different psychiatric disorders
in which anxiety is the main symptom. This article reviews
the primary and patent literature over the last decade concerning
the development of novel TSPO ligands that have resulted effective
in various models of anxiety, taking into special consideration
their structure-activity relationships.
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Conformational Sampling and Energetics of Drug-Like Molecules
Nicolas Foloppe and I-Jen Chen
The pharmacological properties of small organic molecules
depend on their three-dimensional (3D) structure. That includes
physico-chemical properties (e.g. solubility, partition equilibria)
and molecular recognition such as binding to a therapeutic
macromolecular target. At physiological temperature, the 3D
structure of a flexible small molecules is expected to cover
an ensemble of energetically accessible conformations. Therefore,
it is of fundamental and practical importance to be able to
relate the energetics of a molecule to its conformational
preferences and derived properties, a discipline known as
conformational analysis.
The first step of conformational analysis is the generation
of the conformers, referred to as conformational sampling.
This is typically performed primarily using computational
chemistry methods. Taking a fresh look at these methods for
a broad medicinal chemistry audience is the object of the
present review. Indeed, conformational sampling methods continue
to be developed, improved and tested. They underpin much of
the detailed analysis of structure-activity relationships
on selected chemical series, but also the preparation of large
conformational libraries of generic compounds and their exploitation
for virtual screening.
In recent years, the conformational models of active compounds
have been examined to see how frequently they capture their
target-bound bioactive conformation, as revealed by X-ray
crystallography. This provided a context to scrutinize the
intrinsic conformational energetics of these bioactive conformers,
and this subject is still intensely debated. Another line
of investigation concerns the conformational diversity of
the 3D models, and how well they cover the conformational
and pharmacophoric spaces.
This review addresses in general terms: i) the basic principles
of conformational analysis, including modern computational
estimates of intramolecular energy and how those are mapped
on the molecular potential energy surface, ii) some experimental
contributions to probing of the small molecule conformations,
iii) the various computational methods available to generate
conformational models, iv) the conformational properties of
the bioactive conformers, and v) attempts to quantify the
coverage of the conformational models and the controlling
parameters.
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Prenylated Isoflavonoids: Botanical Distribution, Structures,
Biological Activities and Biotechnological Studies an update
(1995–2006)
Bruno Botta Pilar Menendez, Giovanni Zappia,
Roberto Alves de Lima, Roberta Torge and Giuliano
Delle Monache
In contrast with the parent class of flavonoids, the
distribution of the isoflavonoid class in the plant kingdom
is relatively limited, probably owing to the sporadic occurrence
of isoflavone synthase. Isoflavonoids have been mostly found
in the subfamily Fabaceae/Papilionoideae of the Leguminosae
family. Isoprenoid-substituted (also called complex) isoflavonoids
are expressed from a smaller number of plants, as a result
of the similarly restricted distribution of prenyl-transferases
(PT-ase). After the reviews of Tanara &
Ibrahim (1995), Boland &
Donnelly (1997), the Handbook of Flavonoids by Harborne &
C (Handbook of Flavonoids, 1999), and the paper by Harborne
and Williams (2000) few other reports concern the distribution
and the biological activity of complex isoflavonoids, except
a list of isoflavonoids produced from non leguminous plants.
This review deals with an update of the literature on isoprenylated
isoflavonoids in the years 1995-2006 and is focused on the
following highlights.
1. Natural sources of complex isoflavonoids (2000-2006)
2. Chemical structure variety: new entries (2000-2006)
3. Biological activities and a possible structure-activity
relationship (1995-2006)
4. In vitro production and microbial metabolism (1995-2006)
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