MI Sign Up for eTOC Alerts
HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
 QUICK SEARCH:   [advanced]


     


Receive this page by email each issue: [Sign up for eTOCs]

Cover Image
Other Issues:
Previous Next
Contents: October 1 2007, Volume 7, Issue 5   [Index by Author]  [Cover Caption]
      Down Viewpoints
      Down Reviews
      Down Reflections
      Down Nascent Transcripts
      Down Significant Deciles
      Down Beyond the Bench
      Down Net Results
      Down Outliers
 

[Search ALL Issues]


Table of Contents (PDF) | Editorial Board (PDF) | Front Matter (PDF) | Back Matter (PDF) | Advertising (PDF) |
Professional Opportunities (PDF)
To see an article, click its [Full Text] or [PDF] link. To review many summaries, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want, and click the 'Get All Checked Summary(s)' button. To see one summary at a time, click its [Summary] link.

Viewpoints:Back

Dispatches from the Frontlines of Research - edited by John W. Nelson

Karl Peter Giese

Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 246-248. [Summary] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Panagiotis A. Tsonis

Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 249-250. [Summary] [Full Text] [PDF]  

R E V I E W S:Back

Baldomero M. Olivera and Russell W. Teichert

Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 251-260. [Summary] [Full Text] [PDF]  

Predatory cone snails (genus Conus) produce a rich array of venoms that collectively contain an estimated 100,000 small, disulfide-rich peptides (i.e., conotoxins, or conopeptides). Over the last few decades, the conopeptides have revealed a remarkable diversity of pharmacological function and utility. An evolutionary rationale for the existence of such a large and pharmacolog ically diverse set of gene products can be premised on the complexity of intra- and interspecies interactions that define the ecology of Conus snails. Insights into these evolutionary trends, moreover, have been exploited with great neuropharmacological success, so that research into the Conus snails effectively recapitulates a new concerted discovery approach, which we discuss here, for developing unique ligands for both laboratory and therapeutic applications. The Conus peptides thus serve as a model system for reaping the pharmacological potential of biodiverse animal lineages.

Guy R Seabrook, William J. Ray, Mark Shearman, and Michael Hutton

Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 261-270. [Summary] [Full Text] [PDF]  

The precise pathological events that cause cognitive deficits in Alzheimer disease remain to be determined. The most widely held view is that accumulation of amyloid ß peptide initiates the disease process; however, with more than eighteen amyloid-based therapeutic candidates currently in clinical trials, the targeting of amyloid alone may not be sufficient to improve functional deficits over the course of the disease. Alternative targets, such as the tau protein and apolipoprotein E, have thus been increasingly investigated, and in the future, therapeutic strategies will likely address events that are upstream of a more broadly construed pathological cascade that includes but is not limited to the generation and accumulation of amyloid ß. Consideration of such events lays the basis for an "indirect amyloid hypothesis," for which data are beginning to emerge. Although it is clinically defined by simple postmortem criteria, Alzheimer disease likely has a complex etiology, and effective treatments for this disease will become ever more urgent as the world’s population ages.

D E P A R T M E N T S:Back

Reflections:Back

Science in the cultural context

Stanley Scheindlin
A NEW LOOK AT THE XANTHINE ALKALOIDS
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 236-242. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Nascent Transcripts:Back

Emerging concepts from the recent literature
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 243. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Significant Deciles:Back

Dayle Houston
1931–1940
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 244-245. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Beyond the Bench:Back

Representations of pharmacology and science in the media

Christie Carrico
Sex, Lies, and Phlogiston
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 271-272. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Net Results:Back

Sites of interest on the World Wide Web

Sites of interest on the World Wide Web—edited by David Roman
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 273-274. [Full Text] [PDF]  

Outliers:Back

 Cartoon

Outliers
Mol. Interv. 2007 7: 284. [Full Text] [PDF]  

To see an article, click its [Full Text] link. To review many summaries, check the boxes to the left of the titles you want, and click the 'Get All Checked Summary(s)' button. To see one summary at a time, click its [Summary] link.


HOME HELP FEEDBACK SUBSCRIPTIONS ARCHIVE SEARCH TABLE OF CONTENTS
ASPET Journals Pharmacological Reviews Drug Metabolism and Disposition
Molecular Interventions Molecular Pharmacology J Pharmacology and Exp Therapeutics
Copyright © 2008 by the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.