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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Frontiers of metal-coordinating drug design
Alessandra MagistratoAngelo SpinelloGiulia PalermoAakash Sahasubject
DrugaromataseComputer sciencemedia_common.quotation_subject1.1 Normal biological development and functioningChemistry PharmaceuticalCellular functionsCYP450Antineoplastic AgentsComputational biologyLigandsQM/MMArticleruthenium drug03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinebreast cancerUnderpinning researchCoordination ComplexesRAPTADrug Discoverymetal-binding inhibitorsHumansComputer SimulationPharmacology & Pharmacy030304 developmental biologymedia_commonQM0303 health sciencesMetallodrugPharmacology and Pharmaceutical Sciencesmetallo-beta-lacatamasesMMprostate cancermolecular dynamicsChemistry5.1 PharmaceuticalsMetals030220 oncology & carcinogenesisDrug DesignPharmaceuticalGeneric health relevanceDevelopment of treatments and therapeutic interventionsdescription
INTRODUCTION: The occurrence of metal ions in biomolecules is required to exert vital cellular functions. Metal-containing biomolecules can be modulated by small-molecule inhibitors targeting their metal-moiety. As well, the discovery of cisplatin ushered the rational discovery of metal-containing-drugs. The use of both drug types exploiting metal–ligand interactions is well established to treat distinct pathologies. Therefore, characterizing and leveraging metal-coordinating drugs is a pivotal, yet challenging, part of medicinal chemistry. AREA COVERED: Atomic-level simulations are increasingly employed to overcome the challenges met by traditional drug-discovery approaches and to complement wet-lab experiments in elucidating the mechanisms of drugs’ action. Multiscale simulations, allow deciphering the mechanism of metal-binding inhibitors and metallo-containing-drugs, enabling a reliable description of metal-complexes in their biological environment. In this compendium, the authors review selected applications exploiting the metal–ligand interactions by focusing on understanding the mechanism and design of (i) inhibitors targeting iron and zinc-enzymes, and (ii) ruthenium and gold-based anticancer agents targeting the nucleosome and aquaporin protein, respectively. EXPERT OPINION: The showcased applications exemplify the current role and the potential of atomic-level simulations and reveal how their synergic use with experiments can contribute to uncover fundamental mechanistic facets and exploit metal–ligand interactions in medicinal chemistry.
| year | journal | country | edition | language |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020-12-01 |