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Designing small molecules for therapeutic success: A contemporary perspective

Tristan S. Maurer, Martin P. Edwards, David Hepworth, Patrick R. Verhoest, Charlotte Allerton

2021Drug Discovery Today38 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Successful small-molecule drug design requires a molecular target with inherent therapeutic potential and a molecule with the right properties to unlock its potential. Present-day drug design strategies have evolved to leave little room for improvement in drug-like properties. As a result, inadequate safety or efficacy associated with molecular targets now constitutes the primary cause of attrition in preclinical development through Phase II. This finding has led to a deeper focus on target selection. In this current reality, design tactics that enable rapid identification of risk-balanced clinical candidates, translation of clinical experience into meaningful differentiation strategies, and expansion of the druggable proteome represent significant levers by which drug designers can accelerate the discovery of the next generation of medicines.

Topics & Concepts

DruggabilityDrug discoveryIdentification (biology)Computational biologySmall moleculeDrug developmentDrugRisk analysis (engineering)MedicineNanotechnologyComputer sciencePharmacologyBioinformaticsBiologyGeneMaterials scienceGeneticsBiochemistryBotanyClick Chemistry and ApplicationsProtein Degradation and InhibitorsChemical Synthesis and Analysis
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