Drug Inverse Agonism
"Drug Inverse Agonism" is a descriptor in the National Library of Medicine's controlled vocabulary thesaurus,
MeSH (Medical Subject Headings). Descriptors are arranged in a hierarchical structure,
which enables searching at various levels of specificity.
Phenomena and pharmaceutics of compounds that bind to the same receptor binding-site as an agonist (DRUG AGONISM) for that receptor but exerts the opposite pharmacological effect.
Descriptor ID |
D054314
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MeSH Number(s) |
G07.690.773.968.393
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Concept/Terms |
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Below are MeSH descriptors whose meaning is more general than "Drug Inverse Agonism".
Below are MeSH descriptors whose meaning is more specific than "Drug Inverse Agonism".
This graph shows the total number of publications written about "Drug Inverse Agonism" by people in this website by year, and whether "Drug Inverse Agonism" was a major or minor topic of these publications.
To see the data from this visualization as text, click here.
Year | Major Topic | Minor Topic | Total |
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2015 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
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Below are the most recent publications written about "Drug Inverse Agonism" by people in Profiles.
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Andressen KW, Manfra O, Brevik CH, Ulsund AH, Vanhoenacker P, Levy FO, Krobert KA. The atypical antipsychotics clozapine and olanzapine promote down-regulation and display functional selectivity at human 5-HT7 receptors. Br J Pharmacol. 2015 Aug; 172(15):3846-60.
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Milic M, Timic T, Joksimovic S, Biawat P, Rallapalli S, Divljakovic J, Radulovic T, Cook JM, Savic MM. PWZ-029, an inverse agonist selective for a5 GABAA receptors, improves object recognition, but not water-maze memory in normal and scopolamine-treated rats. Behav Brain Res. 2013 Mar 15; 241:206-13.
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