Annual Review of Pharmacology and Toxicology - Volume 64, 2024
Volume 64, 2024
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Molecular Activation of NLRP3 Inflammasome by Particles and Crystals: A Continuing Challenge of Immunology and Toxicology
Qiang Ma, and Chol Seung LimVol. 64 (2024), pp. 417–433More LessParticles and crystals constitute a unique class of toxic agents that humans are constantly exposed to both endogenously and from the environment. Deposition of particulates in the body is associated with a range of diseases and toxicity. The mechanism by which particulates cause disease remains poorly understood due to the lack of mechanistic insights into particle-biological interactions. Recent research has revealed that many particles and crystals activate the NLRP3 inflammasome, an intracellular pattern-recognition receptor. Activated NLRP3 forms a supramolecular complex with an adaptor protein to activate caspase 1, which in turn activates IL-1β and IL-18 to instigate inflammation. Genetic ablation and pharmacological inhibition of the NLRP3 inflammasome dampen inflammatory responses to particulates. Nonetheless, how particulates activate NLRP3 remains a challenging question. From this perspective, we discuss our current understanding of and progress on revealing the function and mode of action of the NLRP3 inflammasome in mediating adaptive and pathologic responses to particulates in health and disease.
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Translational In Vivo Assays in Behavioral Biology
Vol. 64 (2024), pp. 435–453More LessThe failure of preclinical research to advance successful candidate medications in psychiatry has created a paradigmatic crisis in psychiatry. The Research Domain Criteria (RDoC) initiative was designed to remedy this situation with a neuroscience-based approach that employs multimodal and cross-species in vivo methodology to increase the probability of translational findings and, consequently, drug discovery. The present review underscores the feasibility of this methodological approach by briefly reviewing, first, the use of multidimensional and cross-species methodologies in traditional behavioral pharmacology and, subsequently, the utility of this approach in contemporary neuroimaging and electrophysiology research—with a focus on the value of functionally homologous studies in nonhuman and human subjects. The final section provides a brief review of the RDoC, with a focus on the potential strengths and weaknesses of its domain-based underpinnings. Optimistically, this mechanistic and multidimensional approach in neuropsychiatric research will lead to novel therapeutics for the management of neuropsychiatric disorders.
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Mass Spectrometry–Based Proteogenomics: New Therapeutic Opportunities for Precision Medicine
Vol. 64 (2024), pp. 455–479More LessProteogenomics refers to the integration of comprehensive genomic, transcriptomic, and proteomic measurements from the same samples with the goal of fully understanding the regulatory processes converting genotypes to phenotypes, often with an emphasis on gaining a deeper understanding of disease processes. Although specific genetic mutations have long been known to drive the development of multiple cancers, gene mutations alone do not always predict prognosis or response to targeted therapy. The benefit of proteogenomics research is that information obtained from proteins and their corresponding pathways provides insight into therapeutic targets that can complement genomic information by providing an additional dimension regarding the underlying mechanisms and pathophysiology of tumors. This review describes the novel insights into tumor biology and drug resistance derived from proteogenomic analysis while highlighting the clinical potential of proteogenomic observations and advances in technique and analysis tools.
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Novel Immunopharmacological Drugs for the Treatment of Allergic Diseases
Vol. 64 (2024), pp. 481–506More LessThe exponential rise in the prevalence of allergic diseases since the mid-twentieth century has led to a genuine public health emergency and has also fostered major progress in research on the underlying mechanisms and potential treatments. The management of allergic diseases benefits from the biological revolution, with an array of novel immunomodulatory therapeutic and investigational tools targeting players of allergic inflammation at distinct pathophysiological steps. Prominent examples include therapeutic monoclonal antibodies against cytokines, alarmins, and their receptors, as well as small-molecule modifiers of signal transduction mainly mediated by Janus kinases and Bruton's tyrosine kinases. However, the first-line therapeutic options have yet to switch from symptomatic to disease-modifying interventions. Here we present an overview of available drugs in the context of our current understanding of allergy pathophysiology, identify potential therapeutic targets, and conclude by providing a selection of candidate immunopharmacological molecules under investigation for potential future use in allergic diseases.
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Deciphering Drug Targets and Actions with Single-Cell and Spatial Resolution
Vol. 64 (2024), pp. 507–526More LessRecent advances in chemical, molecular, and genetic approaches have provided us with an unprecedented capacity to identify drug-target interactions across the whole proteome and genome. Meanwhile, rapid developments of single-cell and spatial omics technologies are revolutionizing our understanding of the molecular architecture of biological systems. However, a significant gap remains in how we align our understanding of drug actions, traditionally based on molecular affinities, with the in vivo cellular and spatial tissue heterogeneity revealed by these newer techniques. Here, we review state-of-the-art methods for profiling drug-target interactions and emerging multiomics tools to delineate the tissue heterogeneity at single-cell resolution. Highlighting the recent technical advances enabling high-resolution, multiplexable in situ small-molecule drug imaging (clearing-assisted tissue click chemistry, or CATCH), we foresee the integration of single-cell and spatial omics platforms, data, and concepts into the future framework of defining and understanding in vivo drug-target interactions and mechanisms of actions.
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Artificial Intelligence for Drug Discovery: Are We There Yet?
Vol. 64 (2024), pp. 527–550More LessDrug discovery is adapting to novel technologies such as data science, informatics, and artificial intelligence (AI) to accelerate effective treatment development while reducing costs and animal experiments. AI is transforming drug discovery, as indicated by increasing interest from investors, industrial and academic scientists, and legislators. Successful drug discovery requires optimizing properties related to pharmacodynamics, pharmacokinetics, and clinical outcomes. This review discusses the use of AI in the three pillars of drug discovery: diseases, targets, and therapeutic modalities, with a focus on small-molecule drugs. AI technologies, such as generative chemistry, machine learning, and multiproperty optimization, have enabled several compounds to enter clinical trials. The scientific community must carefully vet known information to address the reproducibility crisis. The full potential of AI in drug discovery can only be realized with sufficient ground truth and appropriate human intervention at later pipeline stages.
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Oral Anticoagulants Beyond Warfarin
Vol. 64 (2024), pp. 551–575More LessDirect oral anticoagulants (DOACs) have largely replaced vitamin K antagonists, mostly warfarin, for the main indications for oral anticoagulation, prevention and treatment of venous thromboembolism, and prevention of embolic stroke in atrial fibrillation. While DOACs offer practical, fixed-dose anticoagulation in many patients, specific restrictions or contraindications may apply. DOACs are not sufficiently effective in high–thrombotic risk conditions such as antiphospholipid syndrome and mechanical heart valves. Patients with cancer-associated thrombosis may benefit from DOACs, but the bleeding risk, particularly in those with gastrointestinal or urogenital tumors, must be carefully weighed. In patients with frailty, excess body weight, and/or moderate-to-severe chronic kidney disease, DOACs must be cautiously administered and may require laboratory monitoring. Reversal agents have been developed and approved for life-threatening bleeding. In addition, the clinical testing of potentially safer anticoagulants such as factor XI(a) inhibitors is important to further optimize anticoagulant therapy in an increasingly elderly and frail population worldwide.
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Antiepileptic Drugs as Potential Dementia Prophylactics Following Traumatic Brain Injury
Vol. 64 (2024), pp. 577–598More LessSeizures and other forms of neurovolatility are emerging as druggable prodromal mechanisms that link traumatic brain injury (TBI) to the progression of later dementias. TBI neurotrauma has both acute and long-term impacts on health, and TBI is a leading risk factor for dementias, including chronic traumatic encephalopathy and Alzheimer's disease. Treatment of TBI already considers acute management of posttraumatic seizures and epilepsy, and impressive efforts have optimized regimens of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) toward that goal. Here we consider that expanding these management strategies could determine which AED regimens best prevent dementia progression in TBI patients. Challenges with this prophylactic strategy include the potential consequences of prolonged AED treatment and that a large subset of patients are refractory to available AEDs. Addressing these challenges is warranted because the management of seizure activity following TBI offers a rare opportunity to prevent the onset or progression of devastating dementias.
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Previous Volumes
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Volume 65 (2025)
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Volume 64 (2024)
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Volume 63 (2023)
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Volume 62 (2022)
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Volume 61 (2021)
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Volume 60 (2020)
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Volume 59 (2019)
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Volume 58 (2018)
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Volume 57 (2017)
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Volume 56 (2016)
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Volume 55 (2015)
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Volume 54 (2014)
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Volume 53 (2013)
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Volume 52 (2012)
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Volume 51 (2011)
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Volume 50 (2010)
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Volume 49 (2009)
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Volume 48 (2008)
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Volume 47 (2007)
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Volume 46 (2006)
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Volume 45 (2005)
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Volume 44 (2004)
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Volume 43 (2003)
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Volume 42 (2002)
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Volume 41 (2001)
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Volume 40 (2000)
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Volume 39 (1999)
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Volume 38 (1998)
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Volume 37 (1997)
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Volume 36 (1996)
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Volume 35 (1995)
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Volume 34 (1994)
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Volume 33 (1993)
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Volume 32 (1992)
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Volume 31 (1991)
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Volume 30 (1990)
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Volume 29 (1989)
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Volume 28 (1988)
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Volume 27 (1987)
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Volume 26 (1986)
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Volume 25 (1985)
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Volume 24 (1984)
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Volume 23 (1983)
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Volume 22 (1982)
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Volume 21 (1981)
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Volume 20 (1980)
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Volume 19 (1979)
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Volume 18 (1978)
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Volume 17 (1977)
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Volume 16 (1976)
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Volume 15 (1975)
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Volume 14 (1974)
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Volume 13 (1973)
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Volume 12 (1972)
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Volume 11 (1971)
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Volume 10 (1970)
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Volume 9 (1969)
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Volume 8 (1968)
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Volume 7 (1967)
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Volume 6 (1966)
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Volume 5 (1965)
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Volume 4 (1964)
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Volume 3 (1963)
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Volume 2 (1962)
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Volume 1 (1961)
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Volume 0 (1932)