Medicinal Chemistry

(Jacob Rumans) #1

essentially descending order of importance, these drugs and druggable targets may be
classified as follows:



  1. Proteins, peptides, amino acids
    Enzyme proteins
    a. As drugs
    Alteplase (for ischemic stroke)
    Retavase, tenecteplase (for acute myocardial infarction)
    b. As druggable targets
    Classical enzyme targets (acetylcholinesterase, monoamine oxidase)
    Emerging targets (kinases, caspases)
    Non-enzyme proteins
    a. As drugs
    Insulin, growth hormone
    b. As druggable targets
    Protein folding disorders (β-amyloid, prions)

  2. Nucleic acids, nucleotides, nucleosides
    a. As drugs
    Antimetabolites
    Antisense oligonucleotides
    b. As druggable targets
    Traditional antineoplastic/antiviral agents targeting nuclear DNA
    Agents targeting ribozymes and RNA targets

  3. Lipids
    a. As drugs
    Steroids (estrogens, progestins, androgens, corticosteroids)
    Terpenes (pheromones)
    b. As druggable targets
    Anti-prostaglandin agents (cyclooxygenase inhibitors)
    Anti-leukotriene agents (5-lipoxygenase inhibitors)


482 MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY


Figure 8.5 Macromolecular targets for drug design. The mammalian cell contains numerous
macromolecules including lipids, enzymatic proteins, non-enzymatic proteins, carbohydrates,
nucleic acids, other heterocycles, and water. All of these molecules present important opportunities
for drug design.

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