The growing interest in nicotinic receptors, because of their wide expression in neuronal and non-neuronal tissues and their involvement in several important CNS pathologies, has stimulated the synthesis of a high number of ligands able to modulate their function. These membrane proteins appear to be highly heterogeneous, and still only incomplete information is available on their structure, subunit composition, and stoichiometry. This is due to the lack of selective ligands to study the role of nAChR under physiological or pathological conditions; so far, only compounds showing selectivity between α4β2 and α7 receptors have been obtained. The nicotinic receptor ligands have been designed starting from lead compounds from natural sources such as nicotine, cytisine, or epibatidine, and, more recently, through the high-throughput screening of chemical libraries. This review focuses on the structure of the new agonists, antagonists, and allosteric ligands of nicotinic receptors, it highlights the current knowledge on the binding site models as a molecular modeling approach to design new compounds, and it discusses the nAChR modulators which have entered clinical trials.

Central Nicotinic receptors: structure, function, ligands, and therapeutic potential / M. Romanelli; P. Gratteri; L. Guandalini; E. Martini; C. Bonaccini; F. Gualtieri. - In: CHEMMEDCHEM. - ISSN 1860-7179. - STAMPA. - 2:(2007), pp. 746-767. [10.1002/cmdc.200600207]

Central Nicotinic receptors: structure, function, ligands, and therapeutic potential

ROMANELLI, MARIA NOVELLA;GRATTERI, PAOLA;GUANDALINI, LUCA;MARTINI, ELISABETTA;BONACCINI, CLAUDIA;GUALTIERI, FULVIO
2007

Abstract

The growing interest in nicotinic receptors, because of their wide expression in neuronal and non-neuronal tissues and their involvement in several important CNS pathologies, has stimulated the synthesis of a high number of ligands able to modulate their function. These membrane proteins appear to be highly heterogeneous, and still only incomplete information is available on their structure, subunit composition, and stoichiometry. This is due to the lack of selective ligands to study the role of nAChR under physiological or pathological conditions; so far, only compounds showing selectivity between α4β2 and α7 receptors have been obtained. The nicotinic receptor ligands have been designed starting from lead compounds from natural sources such as nicotine, cytisine, or epibatidine, and, more recently, through the high-throughput screening of chemical libraries. This review focuses on the structure of the new agonists, antagonists, and allosteric ligands of nicotinic receptors, it highlights the current knowledge on the binding site models as a molecular modeling approach to design new compounds, and it discusses the nAChR modulators which have entered clinical trials.
2007
2
746
767
M. Romanelli; P. Gratteri; L. Guandalini; E. Martini; C. Bonaccini; F. Gualtieri
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Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/314611
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