商品簡介
As opposed to other books on the topic, this volume is unique in also covering emerging transporter targets.
Following a general introduction to the importance of targeting transporter proteins with drugs, the book systematically presents individual transporter classes and explains their pharmacology and physiology. The text covers all transporter families with known or suspected importance as drug targets, including neurotransmitter transporters, ABC transporters, glucose transporters and organic ion transporters. The final part discusses recent advances in structural studies of transport proteins, assay methods for transport activity, and the systems biology of transporters and their regulation.
With its focus on drug development issues, this authoritative overview is required reading for researchers in industry and academia targeting transport proteins for the treatment of disease.
作者簡介
Gerhard Ecker is Full Professor for Pharmacoinformatics at the Department of Medicinal Chemistry, University of Vienna (Austria). He is also President of the European Federation for Medicinal Chemistry (EFMC). His main scientific interests are pharmacoinformatic approaches to target drug transporters, in silico screening methods for promiscuous targets and antitargets, and non-linear methods in drug design.
Rasmus Clausen obtained his PhD at the University of Aarhus (Denmark). He did post doctoral studies with P. Krogsgaard-Larsen at the Royal School of Pharmacy (now Faculty of Pharm. Sc., Univ. Copenhagen), where he is currently Associate Professor. His main research topics are neuromedicinal chemistry with focus on glutamate, GABA and GHB, and epigenetic medicinal chemistry.
Harald Sitte studied Medicine at the Universities of Innsbruck and Vienna (Austria). He was appointed Professor for Psychopharmacology at Vienna Medical University in 2010. His main scientific research interests are the structure-function relationships in neurotransmitter transporters and the pharmacological activity of psychopharmacological medicines and drugs of abuse.