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& development It is easy to lose sight of
the numbers involved in combinatorial chemistry and useful to recall the
old story of the inventor of chess and his patron, the emperor of China.
The emperor had so fallen in love with his new game that he offered the
inventor a reward of anything he wanted in the kingdom. "Just one grain
of rice on the first square of the chessboard, and two on the next."
"That's all?" "Yes, and four
grains of rice on the third square, and so on." This seemingly modest request
was quickly granted. But the grains of rice required for each square ultimately required more rice fields than would cover twice
the surface of the Earth, oceans included. A combination of combinatorial
chemistry in conjunction with other ways of prioritizing leads would seem to be
most promising.Related glossaries include Applications Business
of the life sciences, Clinical
trials, drug, device & diagnostics approvals Functional
Genomics, Genomics, Proteomics, Pharmacogenomics.
Informatics Algorithms
& data management, Bioinformatics,
Chemoinformatics, Molecular
modeling, Technologies Assays,
Labels, Signaling & Detection, Gene
amplification & PCR, Mass spectrometry,
NMR & X-ray
Crystallography Biology Biomolecules,
Pharmaceutical
biology Additional definitions appear in the In-depth glossary, after
the Bibliography. 96, 384, 1536, 3456 well plates: See under microtiter/ microtitre plates. antigenic mimicry: See under molecular mimicry antisense oligonucleotides: Pharmaceutical
biology glossary assay: Assays,
labels, signaling & detection glossary Related term
screening automation: Automating processes is often a critical part of
industrializing processes developed in the research lab. Higher throughput,
quality control and better reproducibility are part of this process.. Automation
may be cheaper, particularly in the long run. See Related terms LIMS,
robotics. biochemical genomics: Functional
genomics glossary biologics: Drug approvals glossary biomimetic synthesis: [Clayton Healthcock's] research has been
concerned with developing strategies for streamlining the synthesis of complex,
naturally occurring compounds. "A particularly powerful strategy," he
said, "is 'biomimetic synthesis,' in which we guess how nature might
assemble a particular molecule and then try to mimic this hypothetical route in
the laboratory." Heathcock's work in the total synthesis of natural
products and the development of new synthetic methodology has been of major
interest to the pharmaceutical industry as well as to the international academic
community. [Univ. of California- Berkeley news release "Organic
chemist Clayton H. Heathcock named Dean of College of Chemistry at the
University of California, Berkeley" 8/12/99] http://www.berkeley.edu/news/media/releases/99legacy/8-12-1999.html So-called
because it is based upon insights into the biochemical processes which form the
compounds in the living organisms. [Bio- Organic Chemistry, Research
School of Chemistry, Australian National Univ. Annual Report 1999] http://rsc.anu.edu.au/RSC/ChemResearch/AnnualReport/Report99/BF-report.html biopharmaceutical: Biopharmaceutical companies use biotechnology to
develop innovative drugs. Data on this emerging sector is often incomplete.
[Industry Canada, Canada's Business and Consumer Site "Pharmaceutical
Industry Profile" 2001] http://strategis.ic.gc.ca/SSG/ph01311e.html#bio biotechnology: Business of the Life
Sciences blockbuster drugs: 90% of
drugs marketed by big pharma bring in less
than $180 million per year. Compare that number to the total cost of $350- 600
million for approving a single drug (including all the failures that lead up to
it). Of course, one might think that the money can be made back in four years,
but drugs have a huge maintenance cost in terms of regulatory compliance,
marketing and sales. The margin on a drug- to- drug basis is very slim. This
places the onus on the other 10% of drugs to be blockbusters – to more than
make up for most of the other drugs that are earning far too little revenue. This
is how the industry has structured itself around a blockbuster mentality – a
reliance on drugs that bring in at least $500 million per year in revenue.
Considering the odds of achieving blockbuster status, this is a very high-risk
strategy. Pharmaceutical companies will have to change their ways if they are
going to enter the new era of individualized medicine. [CHI Summit
Pharmacogenomics] Related terms Business of
the life sciences biotechnology, market fragmentation. pharmaceutical industry, bottlenecks - drug discovery: Breaking the Bottlenecks: Applying
Genomics Throughout Drug Discovery and Development October 2001 Identifies the major bottlenecks in drug discovery and discusses
how genomics- based approaches - including both existing and emerging
technologies - can address these problems. http://www.chireports.com/content/reports/dealmaking.asp building block: One of a number of interchangeable reagents
which can be used in combinatorial library synthesis, part of the structure of which becomes
incorporated into the final product, i.e. its residue. See also diversity
reagent, monomer. [IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] Related terms: combinatorial chemistry, combinatorial synthesis, diversity
In-depth: directed library, fully combinatorial, in situ scaffold
formation, monomer, pool/ split, residue, sub- library, unbiased library chemical genetics:
Describes the use of small synthetic molecules, that
elicit a phenotypic change by direct protein interaction, to identify key
genes involved in a specific biological pathway of interest. In many cases
existing drugs are used as the chemical probes whose overall effect is
well established but whose mode of action is not well understood. Chemical
genetic experiments therefore, present an opportunity to clarify the specific mode of action of well- known therapeutics. Chemical
Genomics / Chemogenomics: High-Throughput Discovery of Disease Genes and
Drugs, Nov. 16, 2001 • Boston, MA. As the term has traditionally been used, has
referred to studies that uncover the genetically controlled pathways influenced
by a single specific compound. Also
used to describe a method pioneered by Stuart Schreiber (Harvard Medical
School, Howard Hughes Medical Institute involving a phenotypic screen employing a vast library
of small molecules that have been introduced into a cellular assay. ... The
coverage of such studies can be genomic, but the detailed activity information
they provide is at the genetic level (one gene within a particular pathway) http://www-schreiber.chem.harvard.edu
[CHI Structural Proteomics] Related terms chemical
genomics, chemogenomics. chemical genomics: The current wealth of gene sequence information
available, in conjunction with recent advances in array based technologies,
have facilitated a Chemical Genomic approach. High- throughput screening
with small, highly specific synthetic molecules, against multiple protein
targets, results in measurable phenotypic changes and presents an opportunity
to do gene functional analysis and create new therapeutic leads at the
same time. Chemical
Genomics / Chemogenomics: High- Throughput Discovery of Disease Genes and
Drugs, Nov. 16, 2001 • Boston, MA. A term at a crossroads. Some groups (e.g., NeoGenesis) have used
this term to describe the broader meaning of chemogenomics (i.e., target-
oriented
libraries screened against small molecules). Other experts believe
this term is a better name for what Stuart Schreiber refers to as chemical
genetics. [CHI Structural proteomics] Related terms chemical
genetics, chemogenomics chemical space: The heartland
of this debate [about how many samples are enough] centres on the definition,
and hence extent, of chemical space. More precisely, it focusses on the extent
of chemical space that is accessible by chemical synthesis and which could be
described as drug- like. [Martin J. Valler, Darren Green
"Diversity screening
versus focussed screening
in drug discovery " Drug Discovery Today 5(7): July 2000] Related
term: property space http://162.105.138.23/pdl/web_course/swjs/diversity%20screening%20versus%20focussed%20screening%20in%20drug%20discovery.pd chemogenomics: (Sometimes referred to as chemical genomics) was most likely first used
by Vertex Pharmaceuticals to describe its parallel drug design approach,
which involves using structures of proteins in a given family to design
drugs for the family as a whole. The Vertex approach is truly parallel
(i.e., involving multiple targets at once) and combines structural biology, biased library design and screening, and structure- based drug
design. At
its limit, chemogenomics represents the discovery and description of all
possible compounds that can interact with any protein encoded by the human
genome. The term chemogenomics is slowly (and somewhat grudgingly) catching
on. Broadly, it now appears to mean “taking a combinatorial approach
to screening protein targets by family/ class.” Detailed protein structure
information is used to design libraries that are “biased” to contain compounds
that are more likely to interact with a particular protein family (hence,
it is a “genomic” approach). This screening methodology helps researchers
identify the best small molecule compound to bind to a target (hence it
is a “chemical” approach). [CHI Structural Proteomics] Chemogenomics is an emerging new field in which
small molecule leads, identified for one member of a gene family, are used
to elucidate the function and biological role of another member of that
family, whose function is not known as well as identify potential
drug leads. Both Chemical Genomics and Chemogenomics represent newer approaches
to target identification and drug development with the potential for dramatically
accelerating the process. Chemical
Genomics / Chemogenomics: High-Throughput Discovery of Disease Genes and
Drugs, Nov. 16, 2001 • Boston, MA May be defined, at the limit, as "all possible drugs against all
possible targets". We will discuss some of our ongoing efforts in this
area, emphasizing the essentially parallel nature of the process. Mark Murcko
"Chemogenomics at Vertex" Chemical
Genomics / Chemogenomics: High-Throughput Discovery of Disease Genes and
Drugs, Nov. 16, 2001 • Boston, MA Related terms chemical genetics, chemical genomics clinical trials: Clinical
genomics glossary combichem: See combinatorial chemistry combinatorial biosynthesis: Combinatorial biosynthesis of focused libraries of natural products holds great promise for capitalising on hardwon natural product leads. Miniaturisation of screens is required to reduce the cost of screening combinatorial libraries. Developments in the processes preceding and following synthesis are required to enable the flow of increased numbers of compounds without new bottlenecks developing. The impact of combinatorial chemistry will be greatly enhanced by synergy with ongoing parallel developments in genetic technologies, screening technologies and bioinformatics.
[D. Brown "Future pathways for combinatorial chemistry" Molecular Diversity
2 (4): 217- 222 April 1997]http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov:80/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=9249757&dopt=Abstract combinatorial biology: Biomaterials
glossary combinatorial chemistry: Using a
combinatorial process to prepare sets of compounds from sets of building
blocks. [IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] In the early 1990's it was believed that combinatorial chemistry would revolutionize the drug discovery industry. Ten years later the route from design and synthesis of compound libraries to identification of lead structures is still long and costly. Synthesis of an almost unlimited number of organic compounds covering as much of chemistry space as possible is no longer the most cost effective and time saving approach to hit identification. Creating libraries, using biological target structure to inform chemical design, facilitated by quantum advances in
structural genomics and computational capabilities, is a smarter, more efficient way to produce good initial leads. Considering solubility, permeability and other
drug- like properties early in library design and introducing both target and lead structural constraints in
lead development are further ways to ensure more compounds make it to trial.
Exploiting
Molecular Diversity Feb. 11-12, 2002 San Diego CA Note that there is not enough matter in the universe to prepare all
possible combinatorial variations. Related terms combinatorial libraries, diversity,
microtiter plates, molecular diversity; In-depth: fully combinatorial,
pool/ split. combinatorial library: A set of compounds prepared by combinatorial
chemistry. May consist of a collection of pools, or sub- libraries. Its
composition may be described by the chemset notation. [IUPAC Combinatorial
Chemistry] Broader term library Cell biology glossary
Narrower terms In-depth biased libraries, combinatorial
antibody libraries, directed libraries, focused
libraries, pool, pool/ split libraries, sub- library, random libraries, unbiased
libraries; Related terms combinatorial synthesis, scaffold In-depth fully combinatorial. combinatorial synthesis: A process
to prepare large sets of organic compounds by combining sets of building
blocks. [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry] compound validation: A process to
quickly determine whether a molecule identified in a screen or assay will
eventually lead to a drug. If you look at the costs of developing compounds into
drugs, the most costly failures result from toxicity or pharmacokinetic
liabilities rather than from their failure to act on the target. [CHI
Breaking Bottlenecks] Dalton: Biomolecules glossary data mining: Algorithms & data
management glossary de novo design:
The design of bioactive compounds by incremental construction of a ligand
model within a model of the receptor or enzyme active site, the
structure of which is known from X-ray or NMR data. [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry]
Related terms Molecular
modeling, Pharmaceutical
biology, NMR & X-ray crystallography deconvolute: To render less complex; Process of optimizing an
activity of interest by fractionating (normally by resynthesis, or by elaborating
a partial library) a pool with some level of the desired activity to give
a set of smaller pools. Repeating this strategy leads to single members
with (ideally) a high level of activity and is termed iterative deconvolution.
[IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] Narrower term: In-depth iterative deconvolution dendrimer: Miniaturization glossary disease targets: The critical
strategy for a pharmaceutical company going forward is one that uses pharmacogenomics
and biomedical informatics to
better define disease targets. ... Pharmacogenomics is key to gaining a
better definition of disease, a better stratification of patients and
improved disease staging. Until these are clear, and until some form of
biomedical informatics is put into place, therapeutic design is going to be
flawed by poorly defined targets. [CHI Summit Pharmacogenomics] Broader term: target diversity: The "unrelatedness" of a set of, for example, building
blocks or members of a combinatorial library, as measured by their
properties such as atom connectivity, physical properties, computational
measurements, or bioactivity. [IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry]
Narrower term molecular diversity, Related terms diversity screening,
In-depth binning, cluster. diversity screening: The drivers behind the current ethos of large-
scale diversity HTS are rooted in the desire to build an improved hit
identification process, and are based on the simple model of testing everything.
The key activity over the past five or so years has been scaling: taking the
existing model and increasing capacity by application of technology. [Martin
J. Valler, Darren Green "Diversity screening
versus focussed screening
in drug discovery " Drug Discovery Today 5(7): July 2000] http://162.105.138.23/pdl/web_course/swjs/diversity%20screening%20versus%20focussed%20screening%20in%20drug%20discovery.pd docking: Molecular modeling
glossary drug: Drug approvals glossary drug design: Includes not only ligand design, but also pharmacokinetics
(Pharmacogenomics) toxicity,
which are mostly beyond the possibilities of structure- and/ or
computer- aided
design. Nevertheless, appropriate chemometric (Chemoinformatics)
tools, including experimental design and multivariate statistics, can be
of value in the planning and evaluation of pharmacokinetic and toxicological
experiments and results. Drug design is most often used instead of the
correct term "ligand design”. [IUPAC Computational] The molecular designing of drugs for specific purposes (such as DNA- binding,
enzyme inhibition, anti- cancer efficacy, etc.) based on knowledge of molecular
properties such as activity of functional groups, molecular geometry, and
electronic structure, and also on information cataloged on analogous molecules.
Drug design is generally computer- assisted molecular modeling and does not
include pharmacokinetics, dosage analysis, or drug administration analysis.
[MeSH] An iterative process involving drug discovery, lead optimization and chemical
synthesis with the aim of maximizing functional activity and minimizing adverse
effects. Narrower terms rational drug design, structure- based
drug design, In-depth
molecular design; Algorithms &
data management 3D-QSAR, QSAR; Molecular
modeling Computer Aided Molecular Design, Computer Assisted Drug
Design CADD, Computer Assisted Molecular Modeling CAMD, de novo design drug development: Process of optimizing
compounds following drug discovery. Related terms lead optimization,
lead validation. drug discovery: As the lexicon of
major genomes near completion, high throughput technologies
continue to have a role in the identification of single nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs), tracking the functional relationships among genes
and proteins and the identification of genes responsible for complex
diseases. Microarrays and other massively parallel technologies have placed the focus
on identifying biological pathways and the interactions between the potential
drug targets that make up those pathways. The impact of high
throughput technology has even led to the emergence of a new R&D organizational
structure - around the drug targets rather than around specific diseases. Drug
Discovery Japan: Exploiting Genomic, Chemical and Computational Advances
Jan. 28-30 2002 Tokyo, Japan drug discovery- genomics based: Has the potential to identify those
target molecules (including genes and proteins that do not belong to the target
families addressed by current drugs) that underlie disease processes themselves,
as opposed to symptoms. Together with structural
proteomics, advanced chemical technologies (e.g., combinatorial
chemistry technologies that involve the creation of diverse small-
molecule libraries, chemical genomics and chemogenomics), and high-
throughput screening, genomics- based drug discovery thus has the potential
to create drugs that can address large unmet medical needs. However, good
methods of target identification and validation will be necessary
to realize this potential. [CHI Target Validation] drug discovery pipeline: The process of drug development has evolved into an extremely complex procedure. The average drug takes 12 years and $270
million from initial discovery to public usage.(1) For every drug that is deemed marketable by the FDA, thousands of others are
considered either unsafe or ineffective clinically. Beginning with preclinical research,
new chemical entities (NCEs) are discovered in laboratories and tested in animals for safety and biological activity. If a compound is thought to be safe and effective as a
chemical agent, a pharmaceutical company then submits an investigational new drug application (NDA) to the FDA. Once
approved for clinical studies, a three-phase process begins where safety and efficacy are continually assessed with increased
scrutiny and an increasing patient population. Approximately 70% of drugs entering clinical trials complete
Phase I, 33% complete Phase II, and 27% complete Phase III.1 After Phase III is completed a company then submits a NDA to the FDA. Those drugs that
are approved for marketing comprise an extremely small percentage of new chemical entities (NCEs) that are tested. In fact, from
thousands only a handful of drugs undergo clinical studies, and even fewer receive market approval.
[C. Daniel Mullins et. al. " Projections of drug approvals, patent
expirations and generic entry from 2000 to 2004" report prepared for the
Dept. of Health and Human Services' Conference on Pharmaceutical Pricing Practices, Utilization and Costs
August 8-9, 2000, Washington DC, US] http://aspe.hhs.gov/health/reports/Drug-papers/Mullins-Palumbo%20paper-final.htm Traditionally the movement of compounds along the pipeline has been a fairly linear process. Because ways
of speeding up the process can be enormously economically rewarding, greater
attention is being paid to moving compounds along faster, trying to insure
that compounds which will eventually fail, fail earlier, and looking at
ways of revising the process to perform some evaluations in parallel rather
than sequentially. drug targeting: A strategy aiming
at the delivery of a compound to a particular tissue of the body. [IUPAC
Medicinal Chemistry] Related terms: target, target validation. Narrower term: protein target druggable: Able to be modulated
by a small molecule to produce a desired phenotypic change in cell targets.
[CHI Functional Genomics] Variant spelling is drugable,
however Google has about 283 hits for druggable, with about 138 for drugable
(Nov. 16, 2001). Related terms low hanging fruit, pharmaceutically tractable, small
molecules, tractable targets In-depth privileged structure; Pharmaceutical biology
G proteins, ion channels efficacy: Pharmaceutical
biology glossary fail fast approach: Designed to eliminate high risk compounds at an
early stage, is designed not to increase the throughput capacity of clinical
development, but to free up existing capacity for more successful compounds. The
industry will be faced with an increasing number of candidates and targets
advanced into development as a result of many factors, including the
availability of the human genome sequence. But companies risk actually decreasing
their productivity rate if they end up chasing more low quality drug candidates.
[CHI Summit Report Transforming the Pharmaceutical
Industry 2001] fluidic system: Device for synthesis or screening in which fluids
such as reagents or assay buffers may be directed to specified locations
by the opening and closing of valves in a stationary network of tubes and
wells. Related term, robotic systems; Narrower term microfluidics Miniaturization
glossary focussed screening: Focussed
screening is now well established as a successful hit generation strategy. With
focussed screening, it should also be possible to use an assay that is more
appropriate, rather than one that works well at a large scale. [Martin
J. Valler, Darren Green "Diversity screening
versus focussed screening
in drug discovery " Drug Discovery Today 5(7): July 2000] http://162.105.138.23/pdl/web_course/swjs/diversity%20screening%20versus%20focussed%20screening%20in%20drug%20discovery.pd frontal affinity chromatography: Chromatography
& electrophoresis glossary high throughput organic synthesis: Combinatorial chemistry has resulted in the rapid expansion of compound
libraries to keep pace with the demands of HTS screening. The ability to do novel chemistry on
solid support has allowed for a vast array of compounds to be synthesized and subsequently screened for hits. Recent developments in multistep
solution- phase synthesis have provided even more expansive ways to create diverse chemical libraries with a general trend toward quality and purity in conjunction with productivity's becoming
more prevalent. This conference will highlight recent novel chemistries and reaction strategies, as well as optimization of reactions for library synthesis. Case examples of
resins, linkers, and cleavage methods that make compound synthesis easier, faster, and more practical will be presented with emphasis on quality and
high- throughput purification techniques. High-Throughput
Organic Synthesis Feb. 14-15, 2002 San Diego CA High Throughput Screening HTS: Process
for rapid assessment of the activity of samples from a combinatorial
library or other compound collection, often by running parallel assays
in plates of 96 or more wells. [IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] For any given target, HTS remains the predominant tool for identifying leads for further drug development. Those companies that can effectively deal with the flood of large numbers of potential targets coming out of genomics are those that can gain a significant competitive advantage. However, this abundance of new targets is both an opportunity and a threat. When companies are able to prioritize and validate targets, it allows them to narrow the focus to those leads offering improved chances of success. Those unable to keep up in this new "parallel" world will be left behind in the quagmire of huge expenditures in time and money. The inability to effectively validate and prioritize this large number of potential
targets - many more than just a few years ago- means the risk of failure is even higher than
failure rates of the past. This conference will explore the new techniques and technologies for speeding the drug discovery process and providing the best possible leads to continue through the pipeline.
High- Throughput
Screening: Intelligent
drug discovery and development May 6-8, 2002 Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania Broader term screening Related term throughput, Narrower term ultra high throughput screening. hit: Library component whose
activity exceeds a predefined, statistically relevant threshold. [IUPAC
Combinatorial Chemistry] Related terms HTS, lead discovery, screening. Narrower term progressible hit A molecule with robust dose response activity in a primary screen and known,
confirmed structure. The output of most screening. [The
precise definition of the following terms varies widely between drug discovery
companies. The meanings given here are aligned with the use of the terms within
the lead discovery function at GlaxoWellcome. Martin J. Valler,
Darren Green "Diversity screening
versus focussed screening
in drug discovery " Drug Discovery Today 5(7): July 2000] http://162.105.138.23/pdl/web_course/swjs/diversity%20screening%20versus%20focussed%20screening%20in%20drug%20discovery.pdf intelligent drug discovery: Intelligent
drug discovery and development May 6-8, 2002 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania LIMS Laboratory Information Management
Systems: Most LIMS products allow the laboratory to; register work
requests; print analytical worksheets; monitor and communicate sample/ technique
backlogs;
schedule work; acquire and store analytical data; monitor the quality of
all analytical work; approve analytical data for client release; print
and store analytical reports and invoices; protect the security of all
data; track and locate samples in storage; track and communicate all quality
control in the laboratory; provide laboratory management with production
and financial statistics and with client information, e.g., names, addresses,
sales figures, etc. An appropriately designed and installed LIMS can quickly
bring accuracy and accessibility to the flow of samples and data in any
laboratory. The real value of a LIMS is the ability to maximize sample
throughput and minimize labor costs. [Dan Bentley, "Analysis of a Laboratory
Information Management System (LIMS)" Nov., 1999 Univ. of Missouri St.
Louis] Related terms robotic systems, robotics, sample prep. http://www.umsl.edu/~sauter/analysis/LIMS_example.html lead: A representative of a compound series with sufficient potential
(as measured by potency, selectivity, pharmacokinetics, physicochemical
properties, absence of toxicity and novelty) to progress to a full drug
development programme. [The precise definition of the
following terms varies widely between drug discovery companies. The meanings
given here are aligned with the use of the terms within the lead discovery
function at GlaxoWellcome. Martin J. Valler, Darren Green
"Diversity screening
versus focussed screening
in drug discovery " Drug Discovery Today 5(7): July 2000] http://162.105.138.23/pdl/web_course/swjs/diversity%20screening%20versus%20focussed%20screening%20in%20drug%20discovery.pdf Related term: hit lead discovery: The process of identifying
active new chemical entities, which by subsequent modification may be transformed
into a clinically useful drug. [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry] Related terms drug
discovery, hit, lead generation, lead optimization, screen lead generation: Strategies developed
to identify compounds which possess a desired but non- optimized biological
activity. [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry] Related terms drug development, hit,
lead discovery, lead optimization. lead optimization: The synthetic
modification of a biologically active compound, to fulfill all stereoelectronic,
physicochemical, pharmacokinetic and toxicologic required for clinical
usefulness. [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry] Related terms drug development; ADME.
Pharmacogenomics glossary The large number of leads emerging from genomics and
combinatorial chemistry demands that a new paradigm of lead optimization must be found. This new paradigm demands that companies move to parallel processes that evaluate binding affinity,
ADME, drug properties, etc. earlier in the process in order to cut the time and costs lost in failed leads. It also brings new challenges and complications to the field. With the emergence of new technologies to help better identify the most promising leads a critical issue remains the validation and acceptance of these methods by regulatory agencies, as well as having the ability to run in parallel with other techniques in order to accelerate lead selection decisions. This meeting covers the crucial issues, implications, and strategies that allow you to employ new ways of reaching these goals faster, better and more economically. In addition, delegates will learn new techniques to improve existing leads to make them viable choices to continue through the
drug development pipeline. Smarter
Lead optimization: Intelligent
drug discovery and development May 6-8, 2002 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania lead selection: See lead discovery lead validation:
With no shortage of drug targets, increasing emphasis is being placed
on lead validation. One key challenge is developing high throughput screens.
Related term target validation. ligand design: The design of ligands using structural information
about the target to which they should bind, often by attempting to maximize
the energy of the interaction. [IUPAC Computational] Related term drug design,
molecular design; Pharmaceutical
biology glossary ligand ligand-directed drug discovery: The first goal is to select a
small number of likely targets (which at least in some cases, such as targets in
pathogens, are validated targets) rapidly, without the need for costly and
time-consuming biologically based target validation and functional
determination. The second goal is to obtain lead compounds for these targets,
instead of starting with a biologically validated target and then attempting to
screen libraries for lead compounds that modulate it. [CHI Breaking Bottlenecks] low hanging fruit: The easiest drugs to identify and gain approval
for. The big question these days is how much (if any) "low hanging fruit"
is left. Related terms druggable, pharmaceutically tractable, tractable
targets medicinal chemistry: A chemistry
based discipline, also involving aspects of biological, medical and pharmaceutical
sciences. It is concerned with the invention, discovery, design, identification
and preparation of biologically active compounds, the study of their metabolism,
the interpretation of their mode of action at the molecular level and the
construction of structure- activity relationships [IUPAC Medicinal
Chemistry] microplate: See microtiter plate, microtitre plate. microtiter plate, microtitre plate:
Sample holding device used in combinatorial chemistry and high
throughput
screening for cloning of PCR products and construction of cDNA libraries
in expression vectors. Comes in 96, 384, 1536 and 3456- well formats. Related
term sample The microplate reader was created from the tube spectrophotometer designs of
the 1970s to save precious antibody samples. At first clumsy and inaccurate,
absorbance microplate readers have evolved to pack unbelievable power and
precision, replacing cuvette spectrophotometers for most multisample
applications.1 Continuous improvement is enhancing the classic
designs to embrace the world of high- throughput (HT) screening and to allow
complete analytical automation.2 To handle the HT range (more than 10
microplates a day or 1,000 assays), many instruments now allow robotic handling
of plates "stacked" in accessory plate handlers. [Jorge D.
Cortese " Well Read: Technological improvements are pushing microplate
readers into the 21st century's high-speed, computerized world" Scientist
14 (19): 24, Oct. 2, 2000] http://www.the-scientist.com/yr2000/oct/profile_001002.html
http://www.the-scientist.com/yr2000/oct/profile_001002.html Profile of specialty microwell plates, Scientist 13
(19): 16 Sept. 27, 1999 http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1999/sept/profile1_990927.html
UV/VIS microplate readers, Scientist 12 (14): 18 July 6, 1998 http://www.the-scientist.com/yr1998/july/profile1_980706.html monomer: Member of a building block set which can be repeatedly
incorporated into a library to give a set of compounds of repeating structure;
e.g. amino acids in a peptide library. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] molecular design: The application of all techniques leading to
the discovery of new chemical entities with specific
properties required for the intended application. [IUPAC Compendium] Related terms drug design, ligand design, rational drug design. molecular diversity: Covers combinatorial chemistry, combinatorial
libraries, solid- phase synthesis, robotics, molecular graphics: The
visualization and manipulation of three- dimensional representations of
molecules on a graphical display device. [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry] In the early 1990s it was believed that combinatorial chemistry would revolutionize the
drug discovery industry. Ten years later the route from design and synthesis of compound
libraries to identification of lead structures is still long and costly. Synthesis of an almost unlimited number of organic compounds covering as much of
chemistry space as possible is no longer the most cost- effective and
time- saving approach to hit identification. Creating libraries by using biological target structure to inform chemical design, facilitated by quantum advances in
structural genomics and computational capabilities, is a smarter, more efficient way to produce good initial leads. Considering solubility, permeability, and other druglike properties early in library design and introducing both target and lead structural constraints in
lead development are further ways to ensure that more compounds make it to trial. Anyone interested in learning how to develop more effective libraries faster and cheaper, as well as learning from case studies where informed design in conjunction with novel
assay development has been successful, should attend this meeting. Exploiting
Molecular Diversity Feb. 11-12, 2002 San Diego CA Related terms combinatorial chemistry, drug design, high
throughput organic synthesis; Molecular
modeling glossary Broader term diversity. molecular mimicry: The process in
which structural properties of an introduced molecule imitate or simulate
molecules of the host. Direct mimicry of a molecule enables a viral protein
to bind directly to a normal substrate as a substitute for the homologous
normal ligand. Immunologic molecular mimicry generally refers to what can
be described as antigenic mimicry and is defined by the properties of antibodies
raised against various facets of epitopes on the viral protein. [MeSH from
Immunology Letters 28 (2): 91-9 May 1991] molecular recognition: The ability
of biological macromolecules such as proteins and DNA to recognize selectively
and to bind to other species to form larger supramolecular complexes is
a key element in the extraordinarily diverse and controlled chemistry exhibited
by nature. Chemists today are increasingly interested in mimicking these
processes which involve 'molecular recognition' of one molecule by another
via formation of specific nonequivalent bonds between them and spontaneous
binding together of two to many thousands of molecules into well defined
supramolecular systems with new chemical properties. Industrially important
applications already include drug design, synthesis of stereo regular polymers,
affinity chromatography, crystallization, epitaxial growth and liquid crystal
displays. [BD More and M.J. Dustin Molecular Recognition course, University
of Strathclyde, Glasgow, Scotland, 2000] Related terms molecular mimicry,
peptidomimetic, recognition site.
http://www.strath.ac.uk/Departments/Chemistry/courseinfo/4thyear/13944.html multi component reactions MCRs: Represent an unique chemical concept towards the most efficient synthesis of a broad variety of chemical entities. Instead of building up desired molecules with sequences of known and established reactions one may design new MCRs yielding these molecules in one step by combining more than just two suitable starting materials.
[MCR 2000 Munich, Germany] http://www.mcr2000.org/1/index.html multiwell plate: See microtiter plate, microtitre plate. NCE New Chemical Entity: Drug approvals
glossary NME New Molecular Entity: Drug approvals
glossary organic
synthesis: Narrower terms high throughput organic synthesis Related terms
In-depth cleavage, linkers, resins, solid phase, solution phase, tether orphan products: Drug approvals glossary peptidomimetic: A compound containing ono- peptidic structural elements that is capable of mimicking or antagonizing
the biological action (s) of a natural parent peptide. A peptidomimetic
does no longer have classical peptide characteristics such as enzymatic
ally scissile peptic bonds. [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry] Compounds that can mimic the critical features
of the molecular recognition process of the parent peptide and thereby
block or reproduce the action of the peptide. Peptidomimetics can in this
definition thus be either antagonists or agonists. Probably the oldest
example of a non- peptide peptidomimetic agonist for a peptide receptor
system is morphine, that mimics the opioid peptides [Structure and Conformational
Behaviour of Peptoid Peptidomimetics (thesis) Univ. Utrecht, Netherlands,
1997] http://www.pharm.uu.nl/thesis/boks/chapter_1/Chapter_1.html Related terms: Omes & omics glossary peptidome,
peptidomics phage display: Functional genomics
glossary pharmaceutical industry: Business of the
Life Sciences pharmaceutically tractable: Related term druggable, low hanging
fruit, tractable targets pharmacophore: Pharmaceutical
biology glossary pharmacophore generation: A procedure to extract the most important
common structural features relevant for a given biological activity
from a series of molecules with a similar mechanism of action.
[IUPAC Computational] pharmainformatics: The multidisciplinary informatics needs of the pharmaceutical industry
(HTS High Throughput Screening) data, combinatorial chemistry, ADME
informatics, cheminformatics, toxicology, etc. information access and communication between various departments like the development and
discovery teams. [CCL [Computational Chemistry List] call for papers, Spring ACS
[American Chemical Society] meeting in San Diego (April 1-5, 2001) Sponsored by the Biotechnology Secretariat
(BTEC) Co-sponsored by Chemical Information Division (CINF)] http://www.quimica.urv.es/~bo/llistes/CCL/100/10/msg00081.html pharming: Use of transgenic animals to produce drugs in their milk,
urine or eggs. Transgenic plants can also be used. (Tobacco is said to be
particularly amenable to this application). Related term: Genomics glossary crop
genomics phenotypic screen: See under chemical genetics progressible hit: A representative of a compound series
with activity via an acceptable mechanism of action and some limited structure
activity relationship. [The precise definition of the
following terms varies widely between drug discovery companies. The meanings
given here are aligned with the use of the terms within the lead discovery
function at GlaxoWellcome. Martin J. Valler, Darren Green
"Diversity screening
versus focussed screening
in drug discovery " Drug Discovery Today 5(7): July 2000] http://162.105.138.23/pdl/web_course/swjs/diversity%20screening%20versus%20focussed%20screening%20in%20drug%20discovery.pdf property space: Multidimensional representation of a set of compounds
in which the axes represent quantifiable properties such as molecular weight, CLogP, molar refractivity, etc., and individual compounds are represented
by a vector or set of coordinates. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] Related term chemistry
space protein target: Related terms structure- based design; NMR glossary
site-directed NMR analysis; Microarrays
glossary small molecule microarrays Quantitative Structure-Activity
Relationships (QSAR): Algorithms
& data management glossary. random screening: A staple of the pharmaceutical industry for many
years. Now largely replaced by varying combination of combinatorial chemistry
and/or rational drug design. Related terms diversity screening,
focussed screening Broader terms screen, screening rational drug design: The goal of rational
drug design is to use what is known about a disease or an infectious agent
to create safer, more effective drugs that act specifically to prevent
the disease. The scientific area of rational drug design and medicinal
chemistry is a multidisciplinary field that requires contributions
from experts in infectious diseases, biochemistry, chemistry, structural
studies, chemical synthesis, pharmaceutical sciences, radiology and computer
algorithms. [Research and External Affairs, University of Alberta, Canada]
http://www.ualberta.ca/~univhall/vp/vprea/MST99/eere/rat.htm
Related terms
structure based design; see also Molecular
modeling. recognition site: Pharmaceutical
biology glossary regulatory agencies: See Drug approvals
glossary reverse pharmacology: [Masashi] Yanagisawa [Howard Hughes Medical
Institute at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center at Dallas] went
after these receptors because they are mostly "orphan receptors"—
those with no known ligand. He suspected that the ligand for many of these
receptors would turn out to be a peptide hormone. The computer research yielded
about 50 sequences that the group felt were likely to be G protein-coupled
receptors, and then set about using those receptors as bait to capture peptide
hormones, their true quarry. This strategy is known in the field as
"reverse pharmacology. "In traditional pharmacological
research, the hormone is identified first," Yanagisawa said. "That
hormone is then used as a tag to pull out the receptor molecule. We're doing
this in reverse." ['Hormones found that influence appetite' HHMI News
Feb. 20, 1998]http://www.hhmi.org/news/orexin.html robotic system: Automated device where materials are transferred
by the physical movement of a delivery device relative to the ultimate receptacle,
or vice versa. See also fluidic system. [IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] robust: Algorithms & data
management glossary sample: 1. In statistics, a group of individuals often taken at random from a population for research purposes 2. One or more items taken from a population or a process and intended to provide information on the population or process. 3. Portion of material selected from a larger quantity in some manner chosen so that the portion is representative of the whole. [IUPAC Tox] Related
Terms In-depth: aliquot, autosampler, biased sample, random sample, solid phase extraction, split sample. stratified sample, systematic sample. sample prep: For genomic studies, the quality of isolated nucleic
acid sample is critical in obtaining data that is accurate and informative.
With clinical material it is often imperative to obtain a homogenous sample
or isolate individual cells. The stability and standard of final nucleic
acid sample isolated are as much consequences of storage and handling of
starting material as they are capture, extraction, or purification procedures.
In addition, the volume of information being made available through sequencing
efforts and advances in microarray and other technologies has amplified
the need for rapid, high- standard, sample manipulation in conjunction with
further miniaturization and automation of such processes. Genomic
Sample Preparation May 2-3, 2002 • Boston, MA Related terms: Assays,
labels, signaling & development glossary: single cell detection, single
molecule detection Related terms LIMS Laboratory Information Management Systems, In-depth aliquot, microtiter plate, solid phase extraction, split sample; Proteins glossary
depletion, pre- fractionation; Cell biology glossary
LCM
Laser Capture Microdissection, subcellular fractionation; others? scaffold: Core portion of a molecule common to all members of
a combinatorial library. [IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] This is
different from the scaffold defined in the Sequencing
glossary. Narrower terms In-depth in situ scaffold, preformed scaffold. scalable: Capable of being expanded
for high- throughput. Analogous to recipes optimized for large groups, rather
than standard recipes being quadrupled or more, with less than ideal results. screen: An optimized, streamlined assay format with characterized
robustness to diverse chemical types and conditions such that testing of 10,000
samples is both feasible and cost effective. The spectrum of low- throughput screening
(10,000 50,000 assay points) medium- throughput screening
(50,000100,000 data points) and high- throughput screening (100,000
500,000 data points) can be defined. The scale of implementation of a given
screen is greatly influenced by format, application of technology (e.g.
automation), time and resource constraints. [The precise
definition of the[se] terms varies widely between drug discovery companies. The
meanings given here are aligned with the use of the terms within the lead
discovery function at GlaxoWellcome. Martin J. Valler, Darren Green
"Diversity screening
versus focussed screening
in drug discovery " Drug Discovery Today 5(7): July 2000] Related term
screening http://162.105.138.23/pdl/web_course/swjs/diversity%20screening%20versus%20focussed%20screening%20in%20drug%20discovery.pdf screening: Pharmacological or toxicological screening consists of a specified set of procedures to which a series of
compounds is subjected to characterize pharmacological and toxicological properties and to establish
dose- effect and dose- response relationships. [IUPAC Tox] The use of in vitro
biochemical assays, or tests, to detect compounds which modulate the activity
of a target (i.e., enzyme inhibitors, receptor agonists or
antagonists).
[Oxford Molecular] While drug screening is often talked about in the context of achieving hits,
it is useful to note that the Oxford English Dictionary
definition
of screening specifies that this is "esp.
for the detection of unwanted attributes or objects". Narrower terms diversity
screening, focussed screening, HTS High Throughput Screening,
synthetic lethal screening, Ultra
High Throughput Screening UHTS; In- depth I.R> Thermography. Not the same as screening in
Clinical genomics glossary Related terms
assay, target screening small molecules: Preferred for drugs
as they are orally available (unlike proteins which must be administered
by injection or topically). Size of small molecules is generally under
1000 Daltons, but many estimates seem to range between 300
to 700 Daltons. Related term druggable. Related terms druggable, low
hanging fruit, pharmaceutically tractable solid support: Insoluble, functionalized, polymeric material
to which library members or reagents may be attached (often via a linker)
allowing them to be readily separated (by filtration, centrifugation, etc.)
from excess reagents, soluble reaction by- products, or solvents. [IUPAC
Combinatorial chemistry] Related terms: bead, high throughput organic synthesis, In-depth cleavage,
gel phase, linker, pool/ split, resin, sort and combine space: Narrower terms: chemical space, property space; In-depth
spatially addressable spatially addressable: Having the ability to identify at least
part of the structure of a library component or pool by noting its physical
location in an array. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] Structure Activity Relationship (SAR):
The relationship between chemical structure and pharmacological activity
for a series of compounds [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry] Compounds are often classed together because
they have structural characteristics in common including shape, size, stereochemical
arrangement, and distribution of functional groups. Other factors contributing
to structure- activity relationship include chemical reactivity, electronic
effects, resonance, and inductive effects. [MeSH] Narrower terms Algorithms
& data management 3D-QSAR, QSAR; Related terms NMR SAR by NMR ;
Algorithms
& data management cluster analysis, Principal Components Analysis PCA, recursive
partitioning structure based design: A design
strategy for new chemical entities based on the three- dimensional (3D) structure of the target obtained by X-ray or nuclear
magnetic resonance (NMR) studies, or from protein homology models.
[IUPAC Computational] Based on a firm understanding of
molecular recognition, between active site groups and interacting molecules and is a strategy that has become an integral part of modern
drug discovery. For the past ten years, combinatorial chemistry and
diversity- based high- throughput screening was the approach of choice for
lead identification while computational methods were employed predominantly in lead optimization activities. Due to the recent volume and pace at which the 3-D structures of
protein targets and their co- crystals have been made available, coupled with advances in computation tools, Structure-Based Drug Design has become a tool for
lead generation as well as for optimization. Computational approaches to lead identification and design show many advantages over
diversity- based, high- throughput screening, including reduced reagent storage and handling of large
libraries, lowering of false positives often associated with HTS, and the ability to find low molecular weight leads even when HTS fails.
However, there is little doubt that the greatest advances in drug discovery will be achieved by combining the strengths of
computational and combinatorial chemistry/ HTS strategies. This conference will cover the latest advances in Structure-Based Drug Design methodologies including flexible, faster
docking techniques, virtual screening and library design,
target/ structure focused combinatorial chemistry and will highlight specific gene to lead,
pre- clinical and clinical case examples.. Structure-
based
Drug Design: April 24- 25, 2002 Cambridge MA Since the early 1980s, industry has been interested in structural biology
as part of the discipline of direct structure- based drug design, which
combines structural biology with computational and medicinal chemistry
in order to design drugs - rather than merely selecting drugs - that
modulate a protein target of interest. [CHI Structural proteomics] Broader
term drug design. Related terms Molecular
modeling glossary substrate: Pharmaceutical
biology glossary synthesis: Narrower terms: biomimetic synthesis, high throughput organic synthesis,
multi- component reactions, organic
synthesis, solid phase synthesis, solution phase synthesis In-depth array
synthesis, parallel synthesis synthetic lethal screening: Functional
genomics glossary target: A molecule (usually a protein gene product, but sometimes a DNA sequence, or, in the case of antisense
drugs, an mRNA) that may interact with a drug or drug candidate. [CHI Functional
Genomics] Narrower terms disease targets, drug targeting, target
validation, tractable targets. See also target (hybridization)
Gene
amplification & PCR Glossary Jurgen Drews, now chairman of International
Biomedicine Management Partners, Inc. and formerly of Hoffman La Roche,
notes that all drug therapy is based on the existence of 500 molecular
targets. He expects genomics to add thousands of new targets. target characterization: Requires evidence that the potential
target actually plays a role in the disease process, and that modulation of the
target may ameliorate or reverse a disease phenotype. A potential
target which may be a validated target. [CHI Consulting Services] http://www.discoverydeals.com/aboutconsulting.cfm
Related term target identification, target qualification, target validation target glut: While an individual company may have four or five times
as many targets under analysis now than it did five years ago, most of those
targets are completely new or poorly understood. Lack of annotation for genomic
data is a major problem in choosing the best targets to pursue for drug
development. [CHI Target Validation] Related terms information overload, target identification,
target screening, target validation target
identification: The process of identifying molecules that clearly play a
role in a disease process. Target identification methods provide a finer
degree of detail than target screening. [CHI Target validation] Requires
evidence that the gene/ protein is correlated with the disease. [CHI
Consulting Services] http://www.discoverydeals.com/aboutconsulting.cfm Related terms
target characterization, target
glut, target qualification, target screening, target validation. target
qualification: The process of identifying molecules that clearly play a role
in a disease process (e.g., upregulation of a particular gene identified through
gene expression analysis). [CHI Breaking Bottlenecks] target screening: Identifying
molecules that may be associated with a disease process (e.g., upregulation of a
particular gene identified through gene expression analysis). Screening
approaches, such as data mining or genetic methods (e.g., positional
cloning and single nucleotide polymorphism [SNP]- association
studies) are used to identify new targets. [CHI Target
Validation] Broader term target, Related terms target glut, target identification, target
validation. target validation: Determining that
a molecular target is critically involved in a disease process and a potentially
valuable point of intervention for new drugs. Probably the most important
challenge facing the genomics- based drug discovery and development
industry today [CHI Target Validation] Requires evidence that modulation of the target results in the amelioration
or reversal of a disease phenotype. [CHI Consulting Services] http://www.discoverydeals.com/aboutconsulting.cfm Involves taking steps to prove that a DNA, RNA or protein molecule
is critical in a disease process and is therefore a suitable target for
development of a new therapeutic compound. Sequence homology studies have successfully classified genes into target families such as
GPCRs, ion channels
and kinases. The enormous task of deciphering which of these targets,
that share sequence but not function, are key players in disease and which
should be used for subsequent drug development, needs to be addressed in
a cost effective and efficient manner. Genes that do not belong to an established
family are critical to many disease processes and also need to be validated
as potential drug targets. This extends further the need for high- throughput
approaches to determining which targets are a part of disease relevant
pathways and should be exploited. Not only is it important
to validate targets quickly and efficiently at the early stages of development,
but to make the right choices to save time, resources and money in the
later stages. High-
Throughput
Target Validation Nov. 14-15, 2001, Boston, MA It is becoming clear that microarray analysis will be one of the first steps
in target validation. [CHI Microarrays] The definition of target validation is clearly evolving, can be seen as
"slippery" and means different things to different people. Related terms
target characterization, target glut, target identification, target screening target validation technologies: A number of technologies including downregulation of gene expression (gene knockdown, antisense, ribozymes and
zinc
finger proteins), protein inhibition (phage libraries and antibodies),
cellular
assays, chemical genetics, and combinatorial biology are linked with target
validation. The integration of various technologies is another
challenge. template: Sequences, DNA &
beyond glossary In-depth throughput: Output or production,
rate at which something can be processed. Narrower terms HTS High Throughput
Screening, Ultra High Throughput Screening UHTS. tractable targets: Targets from families such as 7TM receptors,
ion channels, kinases and proteases which have produced previous hits.
[Martin J. Valler, Darren Green "Diversity
screening versus focussed
screening in drug discovery " Drug
Discovery Today 5(7): July 2000] Related terms druggable, low
hanging fruits, pharmaceutically tractable http://162.105.138.23/pdl/web_course/swjs/diversity%20screening%20versus%20focussed%20screening%20in%20drug%20discovery.pdf Ultra High Throughput Screening (UHTS)
: A screening rate of 100,000 assays per day. [IUPAC Combinatorial
Chemistry] Broader term HTS High Throughput Screening. xenobiotic: A compound foreign to an organism. From the Greek
xenox
=
foreign, bios = life. [IUPAC Medicinal Chemistry] Principal xenobiotics
include drugs, carcinogens and various compounds that have been introduced
into the environment by artificial means. [IUPAC Bioinorganic] Bibliography [CHI Breaking Bottlenecks] Breaking
the Bottlenecks: Applying
Genomics Throughout Drug Discovery and Development,
CHI Reports, Nov. 2001. [CHI Target Validation] Target
Identification and Validation, Allan Haberman, Deidre Lockwood and
Malorye Branca, Cambridge Healthtech Institute Report 10, June 2001. Alpha
glossary index IUPAC definitions are reprinted with the
permission of the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry. In-depth Drug discovery
& development glossary aliquot: (analytical chemistry) A known amount of a homogeneous material, assumed
to be taken with negligible sampling error The term is usually applied to
fluids. The term "aliquot" is usually used when the fractional part is
an exact divisor of the whole; the term "aliquant' has been used when the
fractional part is not an exact divisor of the whole. When a laboratory sample
or test sample is 'aliquoted' or otherwise subdivided, the portions have been
called split samples. [IUPAC Compendium] Related term sample prep. array synthesis: Form of parallel synthesis in which the reaction
vessels are maintained in a specified spatial distribution, e.g.
the wells of a 96-well plate or pins held in a rack [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL
CHEMISTRY] Related term spatially addressable. autosampler: Automated sample loader, usually robotic, used
with chromatography and other analytical technologies. bead: (Normally spherical) particle of solid support.
[IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] Related term microspheres; bead arrays Microarrays
glossary biased libraries: Libraries of compounds (putative drug leads)
that exclude compounds unlikely to interact with particular protein family
structures; these libraries are, therefore, “informed” by structure data.
[CHI Structural genomics] Broader term combinatorial libraries. binning: Approach to classifying the diversity of a set of compounds
by grouping related members in "bins" on the basis of common physical or
structural features. Commonly applied to the analysis of a set for the
completeness of coverage of the desired property space. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL
CHEMISTRY] cleavage: Process of releasing compound from solid support, thereby
permitting assay or analysis of the compound by solution- phase methods.
Dissolution of the compound following , rather than the cleavage
step itself, may be rate- limiting. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] Related term: solid support cluster: Group of compounds which are related by structural or
behavioral properties. Organizing a set of compounds into clusters is often
used in assessing the diversity of those compounds, or in developing SAR
models. See also binning; and principal components analysis,
recursive partitioning (Algorithms).
[IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY]. combinatorial antibody libraries: Recent
advances in the generation and selection of antibodies from combinatorial
libraries allow for the rapid production of antibodies from immune and non-
immune sources. This intensive laboratory/lecture course will focus on the
construction of combinatorial antibody libraries expressed on the surface of
phage and selection of desired antibodies from the library. Students will learn
the theoretical and practical aspects of constructing combinatorial libraries
from immune and non- immune sources as well as the construction of synthetic
antibody libraries. Antibodies will be selected from the library by panning.
[Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, Phage Display of Combinatorial Antibody
Libraries Nov. 6-19, 2001] Related term combinatorial libraries http://nucleus.cshl.org/meetings/2001c-mac.htm directed library: (also biased- or focused library).
Library which uses a limited number of building blocks chosen on
the basis of pre- existing information or hypothesis which defines the type
of functionalities deemed important to obtain a particular activity. For
example, every member of the diketopiperazine library shown below contains
the thiol pharmacophore known to interact with metalloproteinase enzymes.
Related term unbiased library. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] focused library: See directed library. fully combinatorial: Containing, or designed to contain, all
possible combinations of building blocks. Pool/ Split libraries are
generally fully combinatorial while parallel synthesis libraries may not
be. See also reagent efficiency. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] gel phase: Description applied to certain 'solid' supports
which display properties intermediate between solid and liquid phases,
e.g. in the apparent mobility of the support as determined by NMR
spectroscopy. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] I.R. Thermography Infrared thermography: Screening technique
where the heat of reaction of a multitude of samples is simultaneously
measured. Has been applied in particular to the screening of libraries
of potential catalysts. [IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] in situ scaffold formation: Process whereby a scaffold
is formed during library production which contains residues of at least
two building blocks; compare preformed scaffold. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] iterative deconvolution: Multi- step application of deconvolution
where successively smaller sub- libraries are prepared and tested to identify
individual active members of a combinatorial library. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL
CHEMISTRY] Broader term deconvolution. linker: Bifunctional chemical moiety attaching compound to solid
support or soluble support which can be cleaved to release compounds from
the support. Careful choice of linker allows cleavage to be performed under
appropriate conditions compatible with the stability of the compound and assay method. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] MPS multiple parallel synthesis: See parallel synthesis. member: a) specific compound which is included in a library;
b) the uncharacterized physical product of a library synthesis. [IUPAC
COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] orthogonality: (a) Property of protecting groups or linkers allowing
removal, modification, or cleavage of one such without affecting others;
(b) pooling strategy whereby library members are incorporated in more than
one pool, and are mixed with a different set of other members in each pool.
Thus a hit results in two or more active pools with only one member in
common. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] parallel synthesis: Strategy whereby sets of discrete compounds
are prepared simultaneously in arrays of physically separate reaction vessels
or microcompartments without interchange of intermediates during the assembly
process. Contrast pool/ split. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] pool: (a) A sub-library; (b) process of combining and mixing
library components or sub- libraries. See pool/ split. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL
CHEMISTRY] pool/split: Also split/ pool; split & mix; divide, couple,
recombine; portion/ mix. Strategy for assembly of a combinatorial library.
The solid support is divided into portions, each of which is subjected
to reaction with a single building block. Pooling of these portions results
in a single batch of solid support bearing a mixture of components. Repetition
of the divide, couple, recombine processes results in a library where each
discrete particle of solid support carries a single library member, and
the number of members is equal to the product of the number of building
blocks incorporated at each step (i.e. fully combinatorial) [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL
CHEMISTRY] preformed scaffold: A scaffold which is incorporated into the
library as a unit. Compare in situ scaffold. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY]
Broader term scaffold. privileged structure: Substructural feature which confers desirable
(often drug- like) properties on compounds containing that feature. Often
consists of a semi- rigid scaffold which is able to present multiple hydrophobic
residues without undergoing hydrophobic collapse.
[IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] random library: See unbiased library. [IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] residue: (a) Portion of a chemical structure which can be identified
as being derived from a particular building block, such as the alanine
residue in the peptide (b) portion of a building block which is incorporated
into the final product but is not part of the scaffold. [IUPAC Combinatorial
Chemistry] Compare residue Proteins glossary. resin: Insoluble polymeric material which allows ready separation from
liquid-phase materials by filtration; can be used to carry library members (i.e.
solid
support) or reagents, or to trap excess reagents or reaction by-products
(see scavenger
resin) [IUPAC Combinatorial] SPE: See solid phase extraction. solid-phase extraction: Method for sample purification whereby
either the desired or undesired components of a mixture have preferential
affinity for a solid material. Adding the mixture to the solid material
then allows facile separation of the desired material by filtration. Related
terms sequestration- enabling reagent and scavenger resin.
[IUPAC Combinatorial Chemistry] solid phase synthesis: Synthesis of
compounds on a solid surface such as tiny plastic beads. [Tripos website
glossary] http://www.tripos.com/investors/glossary.html soluble support: An attachment, common to all library members,
which renders the library components soluble under conditions for library
synthesis, but which can be readily separated from most other soluble components
when desired by some simple physical process. This process has been termed
liquid- phase chemistry. Examples of soluble supports include linear polymers
such as poly(ethylene glycol), dendrimers, or fluorinated compounds
which selectively partition into fluorine- rich solvents (see fluorous synthesis).
[IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] solution phase: Solution-phase combinatorial approaches have
recently become of interest as an alternative drug discovery avenue for lead
discovery and optimization.4 The key advantages of solution- phase
combinatorial approaches include (1) an unlimited number of reactions can be
used, therefore, providing maximal structural diversity, (2) an unlimited
reaction scale allows for the generation of sufficient quantities of libraries
to be derived into different diverse libraries and tested in a broad range of
assays, (3) a large excess of reagents and solvents, typically required in
solid- phase chemistry, are not needed in solution- phase chemistry, (4) there is
no need for linker manipulation, attachment to and detachment from resin;
therefore, the reaction sequences for library generation are shorter, (5)
soluble intermediates and final products can be obtained directly for
purification and assays, (6) it is easy to develop and monitor solution- phase
reactions, and (7) it is an efficient way for lead discovery and optimization
from single- compound and complex libraries. [Haoyun An "Solution Phase
Combinatorial Chemistry: An Overall View" Dept. of Medicinal Chemistry,
College of Pharmaceuticals and Biotechnology, Tianjin Univ. China] http://www.tju.edu.cn/eweb/school/pharmtier/abstracts/anhaoyun.htm sort and combine: Use of directed sorting to facilitate library
assembly. Related to pool/ split protocol but more commonly applied to macroscopic
solid supports (such as pins and related carriers) where each library member
is found on only one, or a small number of carriers. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL
CHEMISTRY] split/pool: See pool/split split samples: See under aliquot. sub-library: See also pool. A subset of a combinatorial
library, physically separate from the rest of the library, generally with
one or more fixed building block. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] tether: See linker. unbiased library: Library prepared from building blocks and scaffold
chosen without bias towards a particular target. [IUPAC COMBINATORIAL CHEMISTRY] |