Fr. 208.00

Drug Selectivity - An Evolving Concept in Medicinal Chemistry

English · Hardback

Shipping usually within 3 to 5 weeks

Description

Read more

The book "Drug Selectivity - An Evolving Concept in Medicinal Chemistry" provides a current overview and comprehensive compilation for medicinal chemists that discusses the effects of aiming for multiple targets on the entire drug development process.
The result is a broad survey of current and future strategies for drug selectivity in medicinal chemistry with theoretical but also practical aspects. Different strategies are presented and evaluated, such as various design approaches, merged multiple ligands, discovery technologies and a broad range of successful examples of unselective drugs taken from all major disease areas. With its wide-ranging view of an emerging new paradigm in drug development, this handbook is of prime importance for every medicinal and pharmaceutical chemist.

List of contents

PART I. INTRODUCTION
Polypharmacology in Drug Discovery
 
PART II. SELECTIVITY OF MARKTETED DRUGS
Kinase Inhibitors
New Indications for Marketed Drugs
Discovery Technologies of New Indications
 
PART III. FIXED-DOSE COMBINATIONS
The Growing Market of Fixed-Dose Combinations
 
PART IV. UNSELECTIVE DRUGS IN DRUG DISCOVERY
The Growing Importance of Individualising Drugs
Drug Discovery Strategies for the Generation of Multi-Target Ligands against Neglected Tropical Diseases
Designing-In Approach
The Linker Approach (Drug-Conjugates)
Merged Multiple Ligands
Pharmacophore Generation of Multiple Ligands
Cellular Assays
 
PART V. THERAPEUTIC AREAS FOR DESIGNED MULTIPLE LIGANDS
5HT Transporter-Based Multiple Ligands for Depression
Multiple Ligands Targeting the Angiotensin System for Hypertension
PPAR-Based Multiple Ligands for Metabolic Disease
Antibiotics
Multiple Ligands in Cancer Therapy
Multiple Ligands in Neurodegenerative Diseases

About the author

Norbert Handler holds a PhD in Medicinal Chemistry from the University of Vienna, where he worked for several years as a postdoc scientist in the field of Medicinal Chemistry. He received an Erwin-Schrödinger-Scholarship and moved to ETH Zürich where he joined Professor Schubigers Group at the Center of Radiopharmaceutical Sciences. After his return to Vienna, he managed the technology transfer office at the University of Vienna before he joined Savira pharmaceuticals, Vienna, as Head of Drug Discovery and Development. Together with Helmut Buschmann he founded RD&C Research, Development & Consulting in Vienna, where he currently is working as Managing Partner. He contributed to more than 25 scientific papers and several patent applications.
 
Helmut Buschmann has a PhD in organic chemistry from Aachen University and extensive industrial experience in medicinal chemistry, drug discovery and development, scale-up, pharmaceutical development, CMC, patent filing and prosecution. Helmut has over 25 years of international experience in drug discovery research and drug development in the pharmaceutical/biotechnology sectors, both in industry and academia. During his career he worked with a broad range of different targets in different therapeutic areas from pain research to anti-infectives. He has a long publication and patent record, being an author/co-author in more than 150 scientific publications, editor of various reference books and is a named inventor/co-inventor in more than 250 patent applications.
As a result of his research activities more than 15 NCEs within different therapeutic areas have entered the clinical phase (e.g. Rosonabant, Cizorlitine, Dulopetine, Axamadol,). Some of them have reached clinical phase III or are marketed (e.g. Tapentadol: Nucynta® Palexia®). Currently, he is Head of Chemistry, Pharmaceutical Development and Patent A_ airs at AiCuris, Wuppertal and cofounder and co-owner of RD&C Research, Development & Consulting in Vienna.

Summary

The book "Drug Selectivity - An Evolving Concept in Medicinal Chemistry" provides a current overview and comprehensive compilation for medicinal chemists that discusses the effects of aiming for multiple targets on the entire drug development process.
The result is a broad survey of current and future strategies for drug selectivity in medicinal chemistry with theoretical but also practical aspects. Different strategies are presented and evaluated, such as various design approaches, merged multiple ligands, discovery technologies and a broad range of successful examples of unselective drugs taken from all major disease areas. With its wide-ranging view of an emerging new paradigm in drug development, this handbook is of prime importance for every medicinal and pharmaceutical chemist.

Product details

Authors Helmut Buschmann, Norbert Handler, Jörg Holenz, Raimund Mannhold
Assisted by Helmu Buschmann (Editor), Helmut Buschmann (Editor), Norbert Handler (Editor), Jörg Holenz (Editor), Raimund Mannhold (Editor), Raimund Mannhold et al (Editor), Helmut Buschmann (Editor of the series), Jörg Holenz (Editor of the series), Raimund Mannhold (Editor of the series)
Publisher Wiley-VCH
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 01.01.2018
 
EAN 9783527335381
ISBN 978-3-527-33538-1
No. of pages 520
Dimensions 176 mm x 247 mm x 28 mm
Weight 1170 g
Illustrations 40 Tabellen
Series Methods and Principles in Medicinal Chemistry
Methods and Principles in Medicinal Chemistry
Subjects Natural sciences, medicine, IT, technology > Chemistry

Chemie, Medizin, Pharmakologie, Life Sciences, Wirkstoffforschung, Biowissenschaften, chemistry, MEDIZINISCHE CHEMIE, Zell- u. Molekularbiologie, Pharmacology & Pharmaceutical Medicine, Cell & Molecular Biology, Pharmakologie u. Pharmazeutische Medizin, Wirkstoffforschung u. -entwicklung, Drug Discovery & Development, Medical Science

Customer reviews

No reviews have been written for this item yet. Write the first review and be helpful to other users when they decide on a purchase.

Write a review

Thumbs up or thumbs down? Write your own review.

For messages to CeDe.ch please use the contact form.

The input fields marked * are obligatory

By submitting this form you agree to our data privacy statement.