Publication | Closed Access
Antipsychotic agents screened as human carbonic anhydrase I and II inhibitors
14
Citations
32
References
2013
Year
Psychotropic MedicationPsychopharmacologyPharmacotherapyExperimental PharmacologyHuman Carbonic AnhydrasePharmaceutical ChemistryPre-clinical PharmacologyMolecular PharmacologyMedicinal ChemistryAntipsychotic AgentsAntipsychotic DrugsInhibitory ActivityPsychoactive DrugPsychiatryBiochemistryPurified Carbonic AnhydraseMechanism Of ActionPharmacologyMolecular ModelingBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesIi InhibitorsCytosolic Carbonic AnhydrasesMedicineDrug DiscoveryDrug Analysis
The antipsychotic drugs currently used to treat schizophrenia can be divided into two distinct classes, typical and atypical antipsychotics. Many drug molecules are enzyme inhibitors that bind reversibly or irreversibly to their target through intermolecular interactions. That's why enzyme inhibition studies are an important issue for drug design and biochemical applications. In this study, in vitro inhibition effect of some antipsychotic drugs on the purified carbonic anhydrase (CA) I and II isoenzymes were investigated by using CO2 as a substrate. CA I and II were purified from human erythrocytes by a simple one step procedure using Sepharose 4B-L-tyrosine-sulfonamide affinity column. The results showed that all the drugs inhibited the cytosolic carbonic anhydrases enzyme activity in a concentration-dependent fashion. Among the studied drugs, aripiprazole and pramipexole were found to be the most active one for hCA I (IC50: 3.64 and 5.37 μM) and hCA II (IC50: 4.16 and 4.81 μM) activity, respectively.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1