| Literature DB >> 21731440 |
Charles H Williams1, Charles C Hong.
Abstract
In this article we propose a systematic development method for rational drug design while reviewing paradigms in industry, emerging techniques and technologies in the field. Although the process of drug development today has been accelerated by emergence of computational methodologies, it is a herculean challenge requiring exorbitant resources; and often fails to yield clinically viable results. The current paradigm of target based drug design is often misguided and tends to yield compounds that have poor absorption, distribution, metabolism, and excretion, toxicology (ADMET) properties. Therefore, an in vivo organism based approach allowing for a multidisciplinary inquiry into potent and selective molecules is an excellent place to begin rational drug design. We will review how organisms like the zebrafish and Caenorhabditis elegans can not only be starting points, but can be used at various steps of the drug development process from target identification to pre-clinical trial models. This systems biology based approach paired with the power of computational biology; genetics and developmental biology provide a methodological framework to avoid the pitfalls of traditional target based drug design.Entities:
Keywords: drug design chemical genetics; drug discovery; model organisms; phenotypic screen; small molecules
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21731440 PMCID: PMC3127116 DOI: 10.3390/ijms12042262
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1.Workflow for two paradigms of drug discovery. (A) Conventional “Target centered” drug discovery; (B) In vivo model based drug discovery.
Comparison of in vivo small molecule discovery models.
| 3–5 days | 10–14 days | 3–4 months | 6–8 weeks | |
| Solid or liquid | Solid | Liquid | N/A | |
| +++++ | +++++ | ++++ | N/A | |
| ∼19,000 | ∼13,000 | ∼25,000 | ∼25,000 | |
| >50% | >60% | >70% | >90% | |
| + | + | ++ | ++++ |
Summary of types of phenotypic screens in zebrafish.
Figure 2.Conservation of organ systems between zebrafish and humans. The zebrafish is a versatile model that is useful not only drug discovery but rapid development of organ systems makes it ideal for assessing biochemical safety and toxicity
Overview of molecular target identification technologies.
| Traditionally used and readily accepted | Requires sophisticated equipment | |
| Low throughput | ||
| Requires chemical modification | ||
| No chemical modifications | Data can be noisy | |
| High throughput | Requires sophisticated bioinformatics | |
| Imprecise | ||
| High throughput | Non native environment | |
| Not suitable for membrane bound proteins | ||
| Requires chemical modifications | ||
| No chemical modifications | Low throughput | |
| Does not require high affinity |