Stanford researchers used computer simulations to pave the way for the discovery of safer, more effective medicines.

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Drugs which bind to G protein-coupled receptors could be effective and safer drugs with minimal side effects.
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LSD and other psychedelics are molecules that attach to GPCRs, as are about a third of all prescription drugs, including antihistamines, beta blockers and opioids. So important is this molecular mechanism that Stanford professor Brian Kobilka shared the 2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his role in discovering how GPCRs work.
When a drug molecule attaches to a GPCR, it causes multiple simultaneous changes in the cell, some beneficial and some dangerous.
By comparing simulations of a GPCR with different molecules attached, Dror's team was able to pinpoint how a drug molecule can alter the GPCR's shape to deliver beneficial effects while avoiding side effects, something that had remained mysterious until now.
Based on these results, the researchers designed new molecules that indeed caused beneficial changes in cells, without unwanted changes. Although these designed molecules are not yet suitable for use as drugs in humans, they represent a crucial first step toward developing side-effect-free drugs.
The discoveries by Dror's team promise to allow researchers to bypass a lot of that trial and error work, so that they can bring promising drug candidates into animal and human trials faster, and with a greater likelihood that thesIn addition to revealing how a drug molecule could cause a GPCR to trigger only beneficial effectse potential drugs will prove very safe and effective.
"," Dror said, "we've used these findings to design molecules with desired physiological properties, which is something that many labs have been trying to do for a long time."
"Armed with our results, researchers can begin to imagine new and better ways to design drugs that retain their effectiveness while posing fewer dangers," Dror said. He hopes that such research will eventually eliminate dangerous side effects of drugs used to treat a wide variety of diseases, including heart conditions, psychiatric disorders and chronic pain.
Source-Eurekalert
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