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Drugs that target dynamic microtubules: a new molecular perspective.

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TLDR
The effects of microtubule‐binding chemotherapeutic agents are reviewed from a new perspective, considering how their mode of binding induces conformational changes and alters biological function relative to the molecular vectors of micro Tubule assembly or disassembly.
Abstract
Microtubules have long been considered an ideal target for anticancer drugs because of the essential role they play in mitosis, forming the dynamic spindle apparatus. As such, there is a wide variety of compounds currently in clinical use and in development that act as antimitotic agents by altering microtubule dynamics. Although these diverse molecules are known to affect microtubule dynamics upon binding to one of the three established drug domains (taxane, vinca alkaloid, or colchicine site), the exact mechanism by which each drug works is still an area of intense speculation and research. In this study, we review the effects of microtubule-binding chemotherapeutic agents from a new perspective, considering how their mode of binding induces conformational changes and alters biological function relative to the molecular vectors of microtubule assembly or disassembly. These “biological vectors” can thus be used as a spatiotemporal context to describe molecular mechanisms by which microtubule-targeting drugs work.

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Carbon nanotubes for delivery of small molecule drugs

TL;DR: The delivery of small molecule drugs is expounded, with special attention paid to the current progress of in vitro and in vivo research involving CNT-based DDSs, before finally concluding with some consideration on inevitable complications that hamper successful disease intervention with CNTs.
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Photoswitchable Inhibitors of Microtubule Dynamics Optically Control Mitosis and Cell Death

TL;DR: The photostatins are introduced, inhibitors that can be switched on and off in vivo by visible light, to optically control microtubule dynamics and are promising as a new class of precision chemotherapeutics whose toxicity may be spatiotemporally constrained using light.
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Plant-derived Immunomodulators: An Insight on Their Preclinical Evaluation and Clinical Trials

TL;DR: The present review will give an overview of widely investigated plant-derived compounds which have exhibited potent effects on cellular and humoral immune functions in pre-clinical investigations and will highlight their clinical potential.
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Medicinal Plants: A Source of Anti-Parasitic Secondary Metabolites

TL;DR: The identified plants and compounds offer a chance to develop new drugs against parasitic diseases and need to be tested in more detail, especially in animal models and if successful, in clinical trials.
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Plant-Derived Anti-Inflammatory Compounds: Hopes and Disappointments regarding the Translation of Preclinical Knowledge into Clinical Progress

TL;DR: This minireview will summarize the current situation of 6 very prominent plant-derived anti-inflammatory compounds: curcumin, colchicine, resveratrol, capsaicin, epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG), and quercetin, and sum up the planned trials in order to provide insights into the inflammatory disorders that are hypothesized to be beneficially influenced by the compound.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The road less traveled: emerging principles of kinesin motor utilization.

TL;DR: The rapid expansion in the understanding of how eukaryotic cells take advantage of kinesin superfamily proteins to generate force and movement in diverse functional contexts is discussed.
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The extended tubulin superfamily.

TL;DR: It is predicted that delta-, epsilon-, zeta- and eta-tubulin all have functions associated with the centriole or basal body of eukaryotic cells and organisms.
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Stathmin: A Tubulin-Sequestering Protein Which Forms a Ternary T2S Complex with Two Tubulin Molecules†

TL;DR: It is shown that stathmin interacts with two molecules of dimeric alphabeta-tubulin to form a tight ternary T2S complex, sedimenting at 7.7 S, which cannot polymerize in microtubules nor in ring oligomers.
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Chromosome-Microtubule Interactions During Mitosis

TL;DR: It is concluded that microtubule dynamics and the proteins that control them are likely to be more important for mitosis than the current enthusiasm for motor enzymes would suggest.
Journal Article

Tubulin and microtubules as targets for anticancer drugs.

TL;DR: The ability of these agents to destroy tumour vasculature is described, which represents an exciting new molecular target in the design of anticancer drugs.
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