Chemogenomic approaches to rational drug design
Open Access
- 1 September 2007
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Pharmacology
- Vol. 152 (1) , 38-52
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0707307
Abstract
Paradigms in drug design and discovery are changing at a significant pace. Concomitant to the sequencing of over 180 several genomes, the high‐throughput miniaturization of chemical synthesis and biological evaluation of a multiple compounds on gene/protein expression and function opens the way to global drug‐discovery approaches, no more focused on a single target but on an entire family of related proteins or on a full metabolic pathway. Chemogenomics is this emerging research field aimed at systematically studying the biological effect of a wide array of small molecular‐weight ligands on a wide array of macromolecular targets. Since the quantity of existing data (compounds, targets and assays) and of produced information (gene/protein expression levels and binding constants) are too large for manual manipulation, information technologies play a crucial role in planning, analysing and predicting chemogenomic data. The present review will focus on predictive in silico chemogenomic approaches to foster rational drug design and derive information from the simultaneous biological evaluation of multiple compounds on multiple targets. State‐of‐the‐art methods for navigating in either ligand or target space will be presented and concrete drug design applications will be mentioned.British Journal of Pharmacology (2007) 152, 38–52; doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0707307Keywords
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