ChemNet
 
Previous article Next article Contents  

Dmitry M. Hushpulian, Irina N. Gaisina, Sergey V. Nikulin, Tatiana A. Chuba, Svyatoslav S. Savin, Irina G. Gazaryan, Vladimir I. Tishkov

High throughput screening in drug discovery: problems and solutions

Abstract

Abstract. World-wide introduction of high throughput screening (HTS) methods in drug discovery research did not result in the increased number of novel medications on the market. We discuss novel trends in drug discovery that came from the understanding that majority of diseases are multifactorial and that one enzyme has many protein substrates. Hence, new approaches are focused on development of drugs, which (1) trigger survival pathways to return the organism to homeostatic balance, and (2) inhibit enzymes modifying histones or transcription factors not at the active site, but by displacement of protein substrates from the enzyme complexes. A good example for both approaches comes from the development of activators of antioxidant defense. We analyze and illustrate problems of commonly used in vitro HTS assays, and briefly discuss advantages and limitations of small animal models. The novel approaches are complementary to the standard HTS and do not substitute for testing in mammals. Development of transgenic reporter mice to monitor drug effects by means of in vivo imaging is extremely promising to select proper dosage and administration regimes for full-range PK studies.
Key words: antioxidant response, reporter assay, Nrf2, Keap1, fluorescent polarization, animal models
Moscow University Chemistry Bulletin.
2024, Vol. 65, No. 2, P. 96
   

Copyright (C) Chemistry Dept., Moscow State University, 2002
   Overview
   Editorial board
   Tables of Contents
   Subscription

The site is supported by Russian Foundation for Basic Research
  The using of published on this page materials is not allowed without special permission
Copyright (C) Chemisty Department of Moscow State University
Web-Editor: B.I.Pokrovskii
Web-design: Copyright (C) MIG and VVM
webmaster@www.chem.msu.su