4.6 Review

Recent Advances in Multi-target Anti-Alzheimer Disease Compounds (2013 Up to the Present)

Journal

CURRENT MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 26, Issue 30, Pages 5684-5710

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/0929867326666181203124102

Keywords

Alzheimer's disease; pathogenesis; multi-target; design; synthesis; small molecule compounds

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2018YFC0310900]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Ningbo City [2018A610410, 431902022]
  3. Foundation of Ningbo University [XYL18004, 421709410]
  4. Ningbo Sci & Tech Project for Common Wealth [2017C10016, 2017C50042]
  5. National 111 Project of China [D16013]
  6. Li Dak Sum Yip Yio Chin Kenneth Li Marine Biopharmaceutical Development Fund [431902301]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Since the last century, when scientists proposed the lock-and-key model, the discovery of drugs has focused on the development of drugs acting on single target. However, single-target drug therapies are not effective to complex diseases with multi-factorial pathogenesis. Moreover, the combination of single-target drugs readily causes drug resistance and side effects. In recent years, multi-target drugs have increasingly been represented among FDA-approved drugs. Alzheimer's Disease (AD) is a complex and multi-factorial disease for which the precise molecular mechanisms are still not fully understood. In recent years, rational multi-target drug design methods, which combine the pharmacophores of multiple drugs, have been increasingly applied in the development of anti-AD drugs. In this review, we give a brief description of the pathogenesis of AD and provide detailed discussions about the recent development of chemical structures of anti-AD agents (2013 up to present) that have multiple targets, such as amyloid-beta peptide, Tau protein, cholinesterases, monoamine oxidase, beta-site amyloid-precursor protein-cleaving enzyme 1, free radicals, metal ions (Fe2+, Cu2+, Zn2+) and so on. In this paper, we also added some novel targets or possible pathogenesis which have been reported in recent years for AD therapy. We hope that these findings may provide new perspectives for the pharmacological treatment of AD.

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