AUTHOR OF THIS BLOG

DR ANTHONY MELVIN CRASTO, WORLDDRUGTRACKER

MIT chemists design nanoparticles that can deliver three cancer drugs at a time.

 cancer, nanotechnology  Comments Off on MIT chemists design nanoparticles that can deliver three cancer drugs at a time.
Apr 222014
 

 

MIT chemists design nanoparticles that can deliver three cancer drugs at a time.

Delivering chemotherapy drugs in nanoparticle form could help reduce side effects by targeting the drugs directly to the tumors. In recent years, scientists have developed nanoparticles that deliver one or two chemotherapy drugs, but it has been difficult to design particles that can carry any more than that in a precise ratio.

Now MIT chemists have devised a new way to build such nanoparticles, making it much easier to include three or more different drugs. In a paper published in the Journal of the American Chemical Society, the researchers showed that they could load their particles with three drugs commonly used to treat ovarian cancer.

read at
TECHNOLOGYREVIEW.COM

 

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More and more companies are using fragment-based lead design as a drug discovery strategy

 DRUG DESIGN  Comments Off on More and more companies are using fragment-based lead design as a drug discovery strategy
Apr 222014
 
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shaking hands
Small fragments that bind in nearby pockets can be connected to make a lead.

In the pursuit of new pharmaceuticals, many medicinal chemists want to start their leg of the drug discovery race with a drug-sized molecule that binds with a tenacious grip—we’re talking nanomolar potency—to its biological target. After all, there are so many molecular traits to optimize, such as reducing a drug lead’s toxicity and increasing its solubility in the body, that beginning with high-binding affinity seems like starting on the right foot. That’s why high-affinity hits are the primary aim of high-throughput screening (HTS), a bread-and-butter starting point for drug lead discovery.

But a growing number of medicinal chemists are leaving the high-affinity paradigm behind. These researchers are sidestepping some of the cherished tenets of HTS in favor of an emerging drug discovery strategy called fragment-based lead discovery (FBLD).

READ AT

http://cen.acs.org/articles/86/i29/Piece-Piece.html

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Academic−Industrial Partnerships in Drug Discovery and Development

 drugs  Comments Off on Academic−Industrial Partnerships in Drug Discovery and Development
Apr 222014
 

thumbnail image: Academic−Industrial Partnerships in Drug Discovery and Development

  • Author: Jonathan Faiz
  • Published: 22 April 2014
  • Copyright: Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA
  • Source / Publisher: Angewandte Chemie International Edition
  • Associated Societies: Gesellschaft Deutscher Chemiker (GDCh), Germany
  • read at

The pharmaceutical industry is facing economic and strategic pressures to remain productive and profitable, and those involved in basic research in academia are encountering difficulties as funding is shifting toward more applied areas. Thus, the field of drug design and development can benefit from academic−industrial partnerships. In his Editorial, K. C. Nicolaou, Rice University, Houston, TX, USA, discusses the challenges and opportunities for such collaborations.

http://www.chemistryviews.org/details/news/6104841/AcademicIndustrial_Partnerships_in_Drug_Discovery_and_Development.html

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