crosssubstances
Crosssubstances is a term used in pharmacology and toxicology to describe substances that exhibit cross-target activity or cross-reactivity across multiple biological systems or detection methods. The concept encompasses two related ideas: cross-target activity, where a single chemical interacts with more than one biological target (such as receptors, enzymes, or transporters), and cross-reactivity in analytical assays, where a compound interferes with the detection of another substance due to structural similarity or shared assay components.
Mechanisms include structural mimicry that enables binding to multiple targets, metabolic pathways that generate several active
Applications and implications: in drug discovery, cross-substance profiling helps map polypharmacology and potential side effects; in