David Poyner*, Helen Cox, Mark Bushfield, J. Mark Treherne, Melissa K. Demetrikopoulos
*Corresponding author for this work
Chapter in Book/Published conference output › Chapter (peer-reviewed) › peer-review
Neuropeptides have been a subject of considerable interest in the pharmaceutical industry over the last 20 years or more. Many drug discovery teams have contributed to our understanding of neuropeptide biology but no significant drugs that act selectively upon neuropeptide receptors have yet emerged from the clinic. There are, however, a plethora of clinically useful drugs that act at other classes of neurotransmitter and neuromodulator receptors, many of them discovered over the last 20 years. Nevertheless, we think that the future for the discovery of novel drugs acting at neuropeptide receptors looks bright for two reasons: (1) there has been a substantial increase in our understanding of the function of neuropeptides; and (2) high-throughput screening (HTS) against neuropeptide receptors has now begun to yield many interesting drug-like molecules, rather than peptides, that have the potential to become clinically useful drugs.