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Researchers Cut Years from Drug development


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#1 Reno

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Posted 15 July 2010 - 05:56 PM


New research accepted by the Journal of Molecular Recognition confirms that a revolutionary technology developed at Wake Forest University will slash years off the time it takes to develop drugs – bringing vital new treatments to patients much more quickly.

Lab-on-Bead uses tiny beads studded with "pins" that match a drug to a disease marker in a single step, so researchers can test an infinite number of possibilities for treatments all at once. When Lab-on-Bead makes a match, it has found a viable treatment for a specific disease – speeding up drug discovery by as much as 10,000 times and cutting out years of testing and re-testing in the laboratory.

"It helps the most interesting new drugs work together to stick their heads up above the crowd," said Jed C. Macosko, Ph.D., an associate professor of Physics at Wake Forest and primary inventor of the Lab-on-Bead technology. "Each type of drug has its own molecular barcode. Then, with the help of matching DNA barcodes on each nanoscopic bead, all the drugs of a certain type find their own 'home' bead and work together to make themselves known in our drug discovery process. It's kind of like when Dr. Seuss's Whos down in Whoville all yelled together so that Horton the elephant and all of his friends could hear them."

Macosko and Martin Guthold, Ph.D., an associate professor of physics at Wake Forest and the co-inventor of Lab-on-Bead, will work with the biotechnology startup NanoMedica Inc. to test how drug companies will use the new tool. The company has relocated to Winston-Salem from New Jersey; Macosko serves as the company's chief innovation officer and Guthold is its chief science officer. The company has one year to work with the technology to bring it to market or relinquish the rights.

Lab-on-Bead screens millions of chemicals simultaneously using plastic beads so small that 1,000 of them would fit across a human hair. Pharmaceutical companies would use the technology to identify treatments and diagnostics for conditions ranging from cancer to Alzheimer's.

One of the targets the research team has focused on is a breast cancer cell called HER2.

"We want to find a molecule that detects that cancer cell," Guthold said. "In that circumstance, you could use Lab-on-Bead as a diagnostic tool."

The North Carolina Biotechnology Center, a private, nonprofit corporation funded by the N.C. General Assembly, provided $75,000 in funding for the project.

Harvard University in Boston and Université de Strasbourg in Strasbourg, France, are providing the chemicals being screened in the Lab-on-Bead process.

"There are an infinite number of possibilities for combining carbon, nitrogen, hydrogen and other elements into different shapes that interact differently in the cells," Macosko said. "Those shapes could block cancer – they could block all kinds of things.

"If there's some cure to a disease or way to diagnose it, we're going to find it faster."


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#2 Reno

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Posted 15 July 2010 - 06:12 PM

Maybe this will finally make it financially viable to do antibiotic research again. I remember back in the 90s the drug companies would say it takes an average of 10 years or more just to go from discovery, through testing, and on to prescribing. Nowadays, I think it's closer to half that, but they still jerk people around and charge out the wazoo. The main reason I keep hearing for lack of antibiotic funding is a lack of money involved in it. Once bacteria becomes resistant to it then the drug becomes obsolete. It's more profitable to make drugs for blood pressure and ED then it is to create drugs for food poisoning or diarrhea.

Edited by Reno, 15 July 2010 - 06:13 PM.


#3 niner

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Posted 15 July 2010 - 09:02 PM

New research accepted by the Journal of Molecular Recognition confirms that a revolutionary technology developed at Wake Forest University will slash years off the time it takes to develop drugs – bringing vital new treatments to patients much more quickly.

Lab-on-Bead uses tiny beads studded with "pins" that match a drug to a disease marker in a single step, so researchers can test an infinite number of possibilities for treatments all at once. When Lab-on-Bead makes a match, it has found a viable treatment for a specific disease – speeding up drug discovery by as much as 10,000 times and cutting out years of testing and re-testing in the laboratory.

These guys aren't going to find a drug 10,000 times faster. They are finding what is called a "hit" in the pharmaceutical industry, and hits are not in particularly short supply. If a hit looks promising, it will be chosen as a "lead", and a LOT of work will be done modifying and testing that lead compound before it will ever be tried in a human. It sounds as though these guys have looked at existing bead technology, as was employed in the "lost decade" of combinatorial chemistry enthusiasm, and shrunk it to about a micron. This sort of thing was expected to revolutionize drug discovery in the mid nineties. It didn't really pan out the way people hoped. I hope there's more to it that wasn't described here, otherwise I don't think it will go very far.

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