Experimental GABA A Receptor Agonists and Allosteric Modulators for the Treatment of Focal Epilepsy
Autor: | Miralem Djesevic, Slobodan M. Jankovic, Jankovic Sv |
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Rok vydání: | 2021 |
Předmět: |
GABA A receptors
focal-onset epilepsy Pharmacology Agonist Ganaxolone medicine.drug_class GABAA receptor business.industry medicine.medical_treatment Allosteric regulation Review positive allosteric modulators medicine.disease Epilepsy Anticonvulsant medicine Molecular Medicine GABAergic Pharmacology (medical) Receptor business medicine.drug |
Zdroj: | Journal of Experimental Pharmacology |
ISSN: | 1179-1454 |
DOI: | 10.2147/jep.s242964 |
Popis: | GABA A receptors are ubiquitous in the central nervous system and there is a huge diversity of receptor subtypes in almost all regions of the brain. However, the expression of GABA A receptor subtypes is altered in both the gray and white matter of patients with focal epilepsy. Although there is a number of anticonvulsants with marketing authorization for the treatment of focal epilepsy which act through GABA A receptors, potentiating the inhibitory effects of GABA, it is necessary to develop more potent and more specific GABAergic anticonvulsants that are effective in drug-resistant patients with focal epilepsy. There are three orthosteric and at least seven allosteric agonist binding sites at the GABA A receptor. In experimental and clinical studies, full agonists of GABA A receptors showed a tendency to cause desensitization of the receptors, tolerance, and physical dependence; therefore, partial orthosteric agonists and positive allosteric modulators of GABA A receptors were further developed. Preclinical studies demonstrated the anticonvulsant efficacy of positive allosteric modulators with selective action on GABA A receptors with α2/α3 subunits, but only a handful of them were further tested in clinical trials. The best results were obtained for clobazam (already marketed), ganaxolone (in phase III trials), CVL-865 (in phase II trials), and padsevonil (in phase III trials). Several compounds with more selective action on GABA A receptors, perhaps only in certain brain regions, have the potential to become effective drugs against specific subtypes of focal-onset epilepsy. However, their development needs time, and in the near future we can expect only one or two new GABA A agonists to obtain marketing authorization for focal epilepsy, an advance that would be of use for just a fraction of patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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