Literature DB >> 7911310

One bead, one chemical compound: use of the selectide process for anticancer drug discovery.

S E Salmon1, K S Lam, S Felder, H Yeoman, J Schlessinger, A Ullrich, V Krchnák, M Lebl.   

Abstract

A technology for chemical synthesis and testing of libraries of millions of chemical entities has been developed for rapid molecular and cellular screening for drug leads. Each individual compound in the library is on a separate resin bead. Screening for binding activity can be conducted directly on the beads. Biological activity is assessed in solution phase assay by cleaving a portion of the compound from each bead. The molecular structure of the compound of interest is obtained by automated peptide sequencing from the bead of origin. We have applied this technology to anticancer drug discovery as well as to other pharmaceutical targets. For anticancer drug development, current molecular targets include B-cell lymphoma, the EGF receptor, and the HER2-neu receptor. Solution phase screening with dual cleavable libraries is being used for growth inhibition of human tumor cell lines. Initial in vitro leads have been identified in each of these areas of anticancer drug discovery.

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Year:  1994        PMID: 7911310     DOI: 10.3109/02841869409098395

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Oncol        ISSN: 0284-186X            Impact factor:   4.089


  2 in total

1.  Potential of phage-displayed peptide library technology to identify functional targeting peptides.

Authors:  Lauren Rh Krumpe; Toshiyuki Mori
Journal:  Expert Opin Drug Discov       Date:  2007-04       Impact factor: 6.098

2.  High-volume cellular screening for anticancer agents with combinatorial chemical libraries: a new methodology.

Authors:  S E Salmon; R H Liu-Stevens; Y Zhao; M Lebl; V Krchñák; K Wertman; N Sepetov; K S Lam
Journal:  Mol Divers       Date:  1996-10       Impact factor: 2.943

  2 in total

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