| Literature DB >> 35268598 |
Abstract
Drug design is a complex pharmaceutical science with a long history. Many achievements have been made in the field of drug design since the end of 19th century, when Emil Fisher suggested that the drug-receptor interaction resembles the key and lock interplay. Gradually, drug design has been transformed into a coherent and well-organized science with a solid theoretical background and practical applications. Now, drug design is the most advanced approach for drug discovery. It utilizes the innovations in science and technology and includes them in its wide-ranging arsenal of methods and tools in order to achieve the main goal: discovery of effective, specific, non-toxic, safe and well-tolerated drugs. Drug design is one of the most intensively developing modern sciences and its progress is accelerated by the implication of artificial intelligence. The present review aims to capture some of the most important milestones in the development of drug design, to outline some of the most used current methods and to sketch the future perspective according to the author's point of view. Without pretending to cover fully the wide range of drug design topics, the review introduces the reader to the content of Molecules' Special Issue "Drug Design-Science and Practice".Entities:
Keywords: QSAR; artificial intelligence; drug design; drug discovery and development; molecular docking; molecular dynamics; virtual screening
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35268598 PMCID: PMC8911833 DOI: 10.3390/molecules27051496
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Average costs for five Big Pharma companies (Pfizer, GSK, Roche, Sanofi and Novartis) over the last 10 years, according to their financial reports published in FactSet fundamentals [7].
Figure 2The human druggable proteome divided according to the target development level [28]. Clinically known targets includes proteins linked to at least one approved drug. Chemically known targets includes proteins known to bind with high potency small molecules that are not yet drugs. Biologically known targets refer to proteins that have a link to any disease but have not been studied for binding to small molecules. The “dark” proteome includes the unstudied proteins.