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Results found for "Brian K Shoichet"
- Maria’s Travel Blogs: ACSMEDI-EFMC Medicinal Chemistry Frontiers 2025
Brian K. Shoichet, Dr. Luc Van Hijfte and Dr. Wendy Young.
- 🤯Mind-blowing GPCR Scoops! Discover the Latest Breakthroughs! ⦿ Nov 18 - 24, 2024
agonists reveal recognition motifs for the MRGPRD GPCR Chunyu Wang , Yongfeng Liu , Marion Lanier , Brian K Shoichet , Esther Martinborough , Jonathan F Fay , Can Cao , Bryan L Roth , et al. adenocarcinoma, β-blockers and antihistamines: A clinical trial is needed Jillian G Baker , Erica K
- Why Mastering Pharmacokinetics Fundamentals Still Defines Discovery Success Today
In modern drug discovery, the promise of precision medicine often collides with the reality of unpredictable pharmacokinetics . Even compounds with pristine target profiles can fail in vivo due to poor absorption, limited tissue distribution, or unanticipated clearance . Although major advances in predictive tools have reduced PK-driven attrition, misconceptions about ADME (absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion) persist across discovery teams. Too often, fundamentals are undervalued: in vitro assays are treated as routine checkboxes, and ADME is mistakenly assumed to track with activity or safety. When PK is misunderstood early, Dr. Kenakin argues, every downstream variable becomes distorted —from preclinical modeling to dose selection and late-stage efficacy. In This Session, You’ll Gain Clarity on how ADME governs translational success A deeper understanding of scaffold independence in PK and safety optimization A renewed framework for asking the four core questions of drug movement Debunking the pharmacokinetics Bottleneck Despite technological leaps, pharmacokinetics is still often mischaracterized as a “solved” problem. In the late 20th century, nearly half of investigational drugs failed due to inadequate PK. Predictive in vitro assays have dramatically reduced this attrition—but with success comes complacency . PK errors no longer dominate failure statistics, but fundamental blind spots still derail programs Every therapeutic area—CNS, cardiovascular, GI—faces the same core PK constraints Dr. Kenakin challenges the assumption that “good enough” tools guarantee progress, emphasizing that judgment and experimental framing still matter PK is no longer the bottleneck it once was—but ignoring fundamentals creates rare, high-impact failures . The Independence of Drug Attributes Primary activity, ADME, and safety form three independent axes of drug optimization . Crucially, altering one does not inherently change the others—a principle often overlooked in early discovery. The IGF-1 scaffold example demonstrates how CYP450 liabilities were mitigated without compromising efficacy This independence empowers chemists to optimize safety or PK without sacrificing target engagement Optimization should be modular, not monolithic Medicinal chemistry succeeds fastest when teams stop assuming trade-offs that don’t actually exist. The Four Fundamental Questions of PK All pharmacokinetic strategy reduces to four deceptively simple questions: How much of the administered dose reaches systemic circulation? Where does the drug distribute once inside the body? How long does it persist at the target site? How frequently must it be dosed to maintain effective exposure? Across therapeutic classes, Dr. Kenakin shows that programs fail when these questions are skipped, deferred, or answered implicitly instead of experimentally . Drug-Like Properties: The Real Starting Point PK does not begin at dosing—it begins with physicochemical properties baked into the scaffold . Solubility, lipophilicity (e.g., logP), and polarity govern whether molecules can cross membranes, dissolve in tissues, or survive circulation. Transporter affinity and solubility limits routinely sabotage otherwise strong ligands Effective PK optimization starts with realistic starting points Early property mapping accelerates the design–test–learn cycle Drug discovery is faster when chemistry starts aligned with biology, not fighting it. Absorption: Navigating Barriers to Entry Absorption remains one of the most context-dependent challenges in PK. While parenteral routes bypass absorption barriers, oral and topical delivery require navigating complex biological interfaces. Passive diffusion dominates for many small molecules, but protein binding, transporters, and tissue architecture play decisive roles Dr. Kenakin highlights predictive in vitro permeation assays that enable early iteration Absorption failures are rarely about route choice alone—they reflect mismatches between scaffold properties and biological surfaces Distribution: Beyond a Uniform Fluid Model The body is not a homogeneous container. It is a patchwork of semi-permeable compartments that act as reservoirs, sinks, or barriers. Volume of distribution provides a quantitative window into tissue partitioning Drugs that sequester into adipose or specialized tissues alter both efficacy and toxicity Dr. Kenakin presents cases where unexpected distribution profiles forced complete strategic pivots Plasma concentration alone is an incomplete proxy for exposure where it matters. Metabolism and Excretion: The Hepatic Engine Once in circulation, drugs encounter hepatic metabolism—primarily driven by cytochrome P450 enzymes —which governs clearance and duration of action. Metabolic conversion often inactivates compounds en route to renal excretion Species differences complicate translation from preclinical models Dr. Kenakin introduces mass-balance thinking and metabolic accounting to proactively manage liabilities Clearance is not an endpoint—it is a design parameter. Predictive Assays: Assumptions and Opportunities High-throughput PK panels have transformed discovery, but they introduce new risks: overconfidence and black-box interpretation . In vitro–in vivo correlation depends on scaling assumptions and controls CYP inhibition, transporter assays, protein binding, and permeability all carry confounders Data quality hinges on experimental design and interpretive skepticism Tools inform decisions; they do not replace them. ADME as the Engine of Translation True PK mastery reveals its value at the point of translation. Even perfect receptor pharmacology fails if target-site exposure is insufficient or transient . Continuous PK integration —from scaffold design through population modeling— correlates with clinical success Scientists need to “think like a molecule” , tracing its path from administration to excretion Minor ADME adjustments —sometimes a single methyl group— can redefine clinical outcomes PK is the backbone of reproducible, actionable pharmacology. Why Terry’s Corner Terry’s Corner delivers weekly pharmacology lectures from Dr. Terry Kenakin, monthly AMAs, and a growing on-demand library built around pharmacology's most important principles. Each session re-centers fundamentals, sharpens judgment, and equips scientists to identify problems before they become failures . Designed for pharmacologists, medicinal chemists, and discovery leaders who refuse to rely on assumptions. Forty years of expertise, applied to modern discovery. Explore the full library Or preview what’s inside: Read the latest articles 40 years of expertise at your fingertips : Explore the full library ➤
- Decoding GPCR Function: The Role of Mutagenesis in Rational Drug Discovery
J., Shoichet, B. K., & Jacobson, K. A. (2010). K., Bouvier, M., & Babu, M. M. (2023). L., Gregory, K. J., White, P. J., Sexton, P. M., Christopoulos, A., & May, L. T. (2016).
- Nanobodies: New Dimensions in GPCR Signaling Research
K., Gellman, S. H., Pautsch, A., Steyaert, J., Weis, W. I., & Kobilka, B. K. (2011). M., Manglik, A., Hu, J., Hu, K., Eitel, K., Hübner, H., Pardon, E., Valant, C., Sexton, P. I., Garcia, K. C., Wess, J., & Kobilka, B. K. (2013). D., Tworak, A., Watanabe, K., Pardon, E., Steyaert, J., Kandori, H., Katayama, K., Kiser, P. D., & Palczewski, K. (2023).
- Angiotensin-(1-7) improves cognitive function and reduces inflammation in mice following mild trauma
Angiotensin-(1-7) improves cognitive function and reduces inflammation in mice following mild traumatic brain injury "Traumatic brain injury (TBI) is a leading cause of disability in the US.
- 📰 GPCR Weekly News, March 11 to 17, 2024
This week's highlight includes congrats to: Makaía M Papasergi-Scott, Peter Gmeiner, Brian K Kobilka, in a High Fat Diet-induced Mouse Model of Obesity GPCRs in Neuroscience Xanthurenic acid: A role in brain
- 📰 GPCR Weekly News, May 13 to 19, 2024
CUB domain of the adhesion GPCR ADGRG6/GPR126 is a key regulator of receptor signaling Jiankun Lyu, Brian Shoichet, Bryan Roth, et al. for their research on AlphaFold2 structures guide prospective ligand discovery
- Hop in the Time Machine with GPCR: Unraveling the Future of Research! ⦿ Nov 24 - Dec 1, 2024
receptor (GPCR) pharmacogenomics Miles D Thompson , David Reiner-Link , Alessandro Berghella , Brinda K a Family A GPCR Jun Xu , Geng Chen , Haoqing Wang , Sheng Cao , Jie Heng , Xavier Deupi , Yang Du , Brian K Kobilka Red and far-red cleavable fluorescent dyes for self-labelling enzyme protein tagging and interrogation
- C5aR Fluorescent Ligands: Need for new Research Tools
During Stage 1 of the project, four promising functionalized structures of P1 showed a K B of less functionalized P1 and combined with different linkers were synthesized, but none of them showed a K functional assays, the best compound is CELT-58 , which was obtained by combining MFLV18 with Cy5, showing a K K.; Liu, H.; Koehler, M.; Zhang, C.; Fan, H.; Alsteens, D. K.; Wang, L.; Chung, K. Y.; Fan, H.; Wei, Z.; Zhang, C.
- 📰 GPCR Weekly News, April 8 to 14, 2024
Katharina Grotsch, Bryan L Roth, Valery V Fokin et al. for their research on Virtual Screening of a Frizzleds act as dynamic pharmacological entities Marina Casiraghi, Robert J Lefkowitz, Peter Gmeiner, Brian K Kobilka et al. for their investigation on Molecular insights into G protein coupling specificity at
- From Failed Experiments to Predictive GPCR Models
It wasn’t until his postdoctoral years at UCSF—under Brian Shoichet—that GPCRs entered his scientific
- A robust and Efficient FRET-Based Assay for Cannabinoid Receptor Ligands Discovery.
.; Vemuri, K.; Pu, M.; Qu, L.; Han, G. (3), 750-762.e14. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2016.10.004 . (5) Li, X.; Hua, T.; Vemuri, K. -H.; Wu, Y.; Wu, L.; Popov, P.; Benchama, O.; Zvonok, N.; Locke, K.; Qu, L.; Han, G. W.; Iyer, M. 382–389. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.bioconjchem.7b00680 . (13) Gazzi, T.; Brennecke, B.; Atz, K. .; Van Der Wel, T.; Mandhair, H.; Honer, M.; Fingerle, J.; Scheffel, J.; Broichhagen, J.; Gawrisch, K.
- Fluorescence based HTS compatible ligand binding assays for dopamine D3 receptors in baculovirus preparations and live cells
To validate that the developed assay is suitable for measuring the K i of different ligands, competition The Log(IC50) change in time was fitted with equation 3 and k given is the weighted average from 3 D.; Hanada, K.; Pagano, R. E.; Miller, L. J. -J.; Veiksina, S.; Kõlvart, K. R.; Min, M.; Kopanchuk, S.; Rinken, A. C.; Chen, K. H.; Bates, M.; Zhuang, X.
- Conjugation Strategies for Probe Development
K., Das, A. K., Eds.; Elsevier, 2023; Vol. 103, pp 59–103. https://doi.org/10.1016/bs.coac.2023.02.005 .
- How Fast Does a Drug Work?
and mastering drug binding kinetics is essential for pipeline efficiency: How fast a ligand binds (k₁ ) and how long it stays bound (k₂) can alter therapeutic profiles dramatically, even if two candidates
- An overview of the compartmentalized GPCR Signaling: Relevance and Implications
Pharmaceuticals (Basel, Switzerland), 14(5), 439. https://doi.org/10.3390/ph14050439 Chen, K. K., Karnik, S. S., Hunyady, L., Luttrell, L. M., & Lefkowitz, R. J. (2003). C., Götz, K., Sungkaworn, T., Lohse, M. J., & Calebiro, D. (2016). I., & O'Malley, K. L. (2017). A., Sriram, K., Wiley, S.
- Fluorescence Polarization in GPCR Research
assays): Displacement of specific radiolabeled ligands in CHO, HeLa, or HEK-293 cells, expressed as K References Kumar V, Chunchagatta Lakshman PK, Prasad TK, Manjunath K, Bairy S, Vasu AS, Ganavi B, Jasti
- Unlocking Cell's Secrets: Spontaneous β-Arrestin-Membrane Preassociation Drives Receptor-Activation
K., Selent, J., Hill, S. J., & Calebiro, D. (2023). M., Kawakami, K., Masureel, M., Maeda, S., Garcia, K. C., von Zastrow, M., Inoue, A., & Kobilka, B. K. (2022). Membrane phosphoinositides regulate GPCR-β-arrestin complex assembly and dynamics.
- Targeted Drug Design through GPCR Mutagenesis: Insights from β2AR
K., Bouvier, M., & Babu, M. M. (2023). K., Hoppe, N., Huang, X. P., Macdonald, C. B., Mehrota, E., Grimes, P.
- Embark on a GPCR Adventure: Your Weekly Research Expedition! | Oct 21-27, 2024
article Class B1 GPCR Dimerization: Unveiling Its Role in Receptor Function and Signaling Sonja Peter , Brian
- Identification of GPCRs Modulating Flow-induced Signaling Pathways in Vascular Endothelial Cells
Brian Arey is doing. https://www.ecosystem.drgpcr.com/dr-gpcr-virtual-cafe/ #gpcr #drgpcr #virtualcafe
- From DNA day to GPCR genomics
K., Strader, D. J., Benovic, J. L., Dohlman, H. G., Frielle, T., Bolanowski, M. A., Bennett, C. K., Hildebrand, P. W., & Skiniotis, G. (2023).
- 📰 GPCR Weekly News, June 24 to 30, 2024
Bryan Roth and Brian Krumm for their study on Molecular glues as potential GPCR therapeutics Drs.
- GPCR News Flash! Top Updates You Can't-Miss! + University CheatSheet is finally available! ❄ Dec 2 - 8, 2024
Structure-guided design of a peripherally restricted chemogenetic system Hye Jin Kang , Brian E Krumm , Adrien Tassou , Bryan L Roth , et al. 🕶 University CheatSheet is here!
- Ode to GPCRs
won the prize for his discovery that dopamine is a neurotransmitter produced in the basal ganglia, a brain prize awarded for work relevant to GPCR-mediated signaling was the 2012 Nobel Prize in Chemistry to Brian Novak, K. Skepticism surrounds triple Nobel winners. Brian K.
- The Perils and Guardrails of Modifying Signalling Proteins in Bioassays
Practical approaches to evaluating and optimizing brain exposure in early drug discovery. Schlander M, Hernandez-Villafuerte K, Cheng CY, Mestre-Ferrandiz J, Baumann M. Dave K, Gelman H, Thu CT, Guin D, Gruebele M. Kim K, Che T, Panova O, DiBerto JF, Lyu J, Krumm BE, et al. Truong ME, Bilekova S, Choksi SP, Li W, Bugaj LJ, Xu K, et al.
- 📰 GPCR Weekly News, December 4 to 10, 2023
Bryan L Roth study on Illuminating the understudied GPCR-ome Save the dates: February 8 - 29: Dr. Research Transcriptome analysis of Schizothorax oconnori (Cypriniformes: Cyprinidae) oocytes: The role of K+
- High-Content Screening for GPCR Programs: Overcoming Assay Limitations with Fluorescent Ligands
Lin S, Schorpp K, Rothenaigner I, Hadian K. Image-based high-content screening in drug discovery.
- 📰 GPCR Weekly News, November 13 to 19, 2023
Brian Krumm and Bryan Roth studied CryoEM structures of adhesion in GPCR CD97, filling gaps.





















