AI Article Synopsis

  • Developing new painkillers is tough because many potential drugs have serious side effects due to their impact on various biological pathways beyond just pain relief.
  • Researchers are focusing on targeting protein-protein interactions (PPIs) involved in pain signaling to create more effective and safer analgesics, using rodent models to evaluate their pain-reducing abilities.
  • By analyzing data from sensory nerve tissues, they identified key PPIs for exploring new drug designs, suggesting that blocking specific interactions in relevant proteins may improve pain treatment while minimizing unwanted effects.

Article Abstract

The development of new analgesics has been challenging. Candidate drugs often have limited clinical utility due to side effects that arise because many drug targets are involved in signaling pathways other than pain transduction. Here, we explored the potential of targeting protein-protein interactions (PPIs) that mediate pain signaling as an approach to developing drugs to treat chronic pain. We reviewed the approaches used to identify small molecules and peptide modulators of PPIs and their ability to decrease pain-like behaviors in rodent animal models. We analyzed data from rodent and human sensory nerve tissues to build associated signaling networks and assessed both validated and potential interactions and the structures of the interacting domains that could inform the design of synthetic peptides and small molecules. This resource identifies PPIs that could be explored for the development of new analgesics, particularly between scaffolding proteins and receptors for various growth factors and neurotransmitters, as well as ion channels and other enzymes. Targeting the adaptor function of CBL by blocking interactions between its proline-rich carboxyl-terminal domain and its SH3-domain-containing protein partners, such as GRB2, could disrupt endosomal signaling induced by pain-associated growth factors. This approach would leave intact its E3-ligase functions, which are mediated by other domains and are critical for other cellular functions. This potential of PPI modulators to be more selective may mitigate side effects and improve the clinical management of pain.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/scisignal.adn4694DOI Listing

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