| Literature DB >> 25856571 |
Marina Candido Primi1, Vinícius Gonçalves Maltarollo1, Juliana Gallottini Magalhães1, Matheus Malta de Sá2, Carlota Oliveira Rangel-Yagui3, Gustavo Henrique Goulart Trossini1.
Abstract
The dopamine hypothesis states that decreased dopaminergic neurotransmission reduces schizophrenia symptoms. Neurokinin-3 receptor (NK3) antagonists reduce dopamine release and have shown positive effects in pre-clinical and clinical trials. We employed 2D and 3D-QSAR analysis on a series of 40 non-peptide NK3 antagonists. Multivariate statistical analysis, PCA and HCA, were performed to rational training/test set splitting and PLS regression was employed to construct all QSAR models. We constructed one highly predictive CoMFA model (q(2)= 0.810 and r(2)= 0.929) and acceptable HQSAR and CoMSIA models (HQSAR q(2)= 0.644 and r(2)= 0.910; CoMSIA q(2)= 0.691, r(2)= 0.911). The three different techniques provided convergent physicochemical results. All models indicate cyclopropane, piperidine and di-chloro-phenyl ring attached to cyclopropane ring and also the amide group attached to the piperidine ring could play an important role in ligand-receptor interactions. These findings may contribute to develop potential NK3 receptor antagonists for schizophrenia.Entities:
Keywords: CoMFA; CoMSIA; HQSAR; NK3 receptor antagonists; schizophrenia
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Year: 2015 PMID: 25856571 DOI: 10.3109/14756366.2015.1021250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Enzyme Inhib Med Chem ISSN: 1475-6366 Impact factor: 5.051