Abstract Recent repurposing project tendering calls by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (US) and the Medical Research Council (UK)

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Drug Discovery Process
Advertisements

Drug Discovery: an Industrial Process How are drugs discovered and developed? Dr Steve Carney, Managing Editor, Drug Discovery Today.
West Midlands Academic Health Science Network
TBD-UK: The UK response in the discovery and development of new TB drugs. Dr Geoff Coxon Deputy Leader & Director of Medicinal Chemistry, TBD-UK APPG-TB.
Challenges in new drug discovery in South Asia
Integrative Organs Systems Scientists and Drug Discovery: The Link Between Big Pharma and Academia Glenn A. Reinhart, Ph.D. Senior Group Leader Integrative.
Progress In Computational Toxicology Sean Ekins 1,2 1 Collaborations in Chemistry, 5616 Hilltop Needmore Road, Fuquay Varina, NC27526, USA, NC. 2 Collaborative.
Why Are We Still Doing Industrial Age Drug Discovery For Neglected Diseases in The Information Age? Sean Ekins Collaborations In Chemistry, Fuquay Varina,
Royal Society of Chemistry developments to support open drug discovery Antony Williams, Ken Karapetyan, Valery Tkachenko, Colin Batchelor Alexey Pshenichnov.
Graffiti Reporting A partnership of Local and State Government; My Local Services App enhancements.
From Chemoinformatics to Systems Chemical Biology Irene Kouskoumvekaki, Associate Professor, Computational Chemical Biology, CBS, DTU-Systems Biology #27803,
Why you need this App Sean Ekins 1, Alex M. Clark 2 1 Collaborations in Chemistry, 5616 Hilltop Needmore Road, Fuquay Varina, NC 27526, U.S.A. 2 Molecular.
Jeffery Loo NLM Associate Fellow ’03 – ’05 chemicalinformaticsforlibraries.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH Working with FDA: Biological Products and Clinical Development Critical Path.
What Do Toxicologists Do?
National Institute on Aging Richard J. Hodes, M.D. Director,NIA/NIH/DHHS ADC Meeting – NIH Roadmap and Budget October 2003.
1/ Thomson Scientific/ 13 July 2015 Investigator Portal.
Discovery of new medicines through new models of collaboration Simon Ward Professor of Medicinal Chemistry & Director of Translational Drug Discovery Group.
Molecular Library and Imaging Francis Collins, NHGRI Tom Insel, NIMH Rod Pettigrew, NIBIB Building Blocks and Pathways Francis Collins,NHGRI Richard Hodes,
The NIH Roadmap for Medical Research
Why Open Source Drug Discovery Needs a “Champion” Sean Ekins, Ph.D., D.Sc. Collaborations In Chemistry, Fuquay Varina, NC.
1 An Example of a Lean Startup: The Past, Present and Future of the Open Drug Discovery Teams Mobile App An Example of a Lean Startup: The Past, Present.
Johns Hopkins Technology Transfer 1 Translational Biomedical Research: Moving Discovery from Academic Centers to the Community Translational Biomedical.
Knowledgebase Creation & Systems Biology: A new prospect in discovery informatics S.Shriram, Siri Technologies (Cytogenomics), Bangalore S.Shriram, Siri.
Asia’s Largest Global Software & Services Company Genomes to Drugs: A Bioinformatics Perspective Sharmila Mande Bioinformatics Division Advanced Technology.
Bernard A Fox, PhD Immediate Past President and Chair, Executive Council Society for Immunotherapy of Cancer (SITC) Defining the Critical Hurdles in Cancer.
Sage Bionetworks Mission Sage Bionetworks is a non-profit organization with a vision to create a “commons” where integrative bionetworks are evolved by.
Introduction In order for us to learn from the extensive prior literature we have collated information on molecules screened versus Mycobacterium tuberculosis.
Big Data Supporting Drug Discovery Cautionary Tales from the World of Chemistry for Translational Informatics Valery Tkachenko RSC-CSIR/OSDD meeting Pune,
Dispensing Processes Impact Computational and Statistical Analyses Sean Ekins 1, Joe Olechno 2 Antony J. Williams 3 1 Collaborations in Chemistry, Fuquay.
INFSO-RI Enabling Grids for E-sciencE V. Breton, 30/08/05, seminar at SERONO Grid added value to fight malaria Vincent Breton EGEE.
Dispensing Processes Profoundly Impact Biological, Computational and Statistical Analyses Sean Ekins 1, Joe Olechno 2 Antony J. Williams 3 1 Collaborations.
ChEMBL– Open Access Database For Drug Discovery By – Udghosh Singh M.S.(Pharm), 3 rd Sem Pharmacoinformatics.
Leading scientists towards openness Antony J Williams 1 and Sean Ekins 2 1 Royal Society of Chemistry, Wake Forest, NC 2 Collaborations In Chemistry, Fuquay.
Page 1 SCAI Dr. Marc Zimmermann Department of Bioinformatics Fraunhofer Institute for Algorithms and Scientific Computing (SCAI) Grid-enabled drug discovery.
Seventh Framework Programme Theme 1 - Health Ph D.Olguta Iordache Health - NCP.
Samudrala group - overall research areas CASP6 prediction for T Å C α RMSD for all 70 residues CASP6 prediction for T Å C α RMSD for all.
QSAR Study of HIV Protease Inhibitors Using Neural Network and Genetic Algorithm Akmal Aulia, 1 Sunil Kumar, 2 Rajni Garg, * 3 A. Srinivas Reddy, 4 1 Computational.
PUTTING THE PATIENT AT THE CENTER OF HEALTHCARE RESEARCH Towards a more inclusive model.
Pathogenomics How this project began: Ann Rose - take advantage of DNA sequence information - genomics Julian Davies - use the information to understand.
ECCR Overview/MLSCN. NIH Roadmap Series of initiatives designed to pursue major opportunities in biomedical research and gaps in current knowledge that.
Seascape/Indira Ghosh, JNU Introduction. Seascape Intro Indo-US company with a mission to foster international collaborative research, education and software.
Why Write A Grant? Elaine M. Hylek, MD, MPH Professor of Medicine Associate Director, Education and Training Division BU CTSI Section of General Internal.
NIH and the Clinical Research Enterprise Third Annual Medical Research Summit March 6, 2003 Mary S. McCabe National Institute of Health.
MRC Technology an independent life science medical research charity Biotech & Money 2016 Mr Andrew Mercieca, Director of Finance
Discovery of Therapeutics to Improve Quality of Life Ram Samudrala University of Washington.
MDL Information Systems, Inc. Powering the Process of Invention Donna del Rey Director, Business Planning
High-Throughput Screening Core Facility at CU-Boulder Wei Wang
BioMarker Strategies biotrinity 2016 London April Functional Profiling to Guide Cancer Drug Development and Treatment Selection.
The opportunities and challenges of sharing genomics data with the pharmaceutical industry Shahid Hanif, Head of Health Data & Outcomes, ABPI DNA digest.
Indiana University School of Indiana University ECCR Summary Infrastructure: Cheminformatics web service infrastructure made available as a community resource.
The U.S. National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences CHRISTOPHER P. AUSTIN, M.D. DIRECTOR, NCATS U.S. NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH BIO INTERNATIONAL.
Innovation Project Title
The CompTox Chemistry Dashboard: an informational data hub at the
Building a Drug Repurposing Network (DR3N) for the CTSA Consortium:
RDA US Science workshop Arlington VA, Aug 2014 Cees de Laat with many slides from Ed Seidel/Rob Pennington.
SEMINAR 1. Title : Discovery of Protein-Protein Interaction Modulators Using Affinity-Based High-Throughput Screening 2. Speaker : Hyun-Suk Lim (포항공대 (POSTECH))
Intersecting different databases to define the inner and outer limits of the data-supported druggable proteome
ATOM Accelerating Therapeutics for Opportunities in Medicine
APPLICATIONS OF BIOINFORMATICS IN DRUG DISCOVERY
Action: BM0806 Recent Advances in Histamine Receptor H4R Research
The percentage of NASs approved by CDER
From Bench to Clinical Applications: Money Talks
Mobilizing EPA’s CompTox Chemistry Dashboard Data on Mobile Devices
Clinical and Translational Science Awards Program
Drug Design and Drug Discovery
Rational for the 5R Philosophy
Consortium: National networks in 16 European countries.
Volume 21, Issue 9, Pages (September 2014)
Overview of my expertise
Presentation transcript:

Abstract Recent repurposing project tendering calls by the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (US) and the Medical Research Council (UK) have included compound information and pharmacological data. However none of the internal company development code names were assigned to chemical structures in the official documentation. We now describe data gathering and curation to assign structures and in silico analysis. We also describe how this data has been shared using Mobile apps and how collaborative software can facilitate target predictions by integrating to public data sources. These efforts suggest potential new uses for molecules that can be tested in vitro. Introduction We are currently seeing a shift towards drug repositioning or repurposing [1] as a strategy to find new uses for previously approved drugs and “parked” or “off the shelf” molecules which have reached the clinic without any safety signals but did not show efficacy against their intended primary disease target. Both NCATS and MRC have released sets of compounds from drug companies without structures representing 56 and 22 small molecules, respectively [2]. We have attempted to collate these molecular structures then use them with computational machine learning methods and similarity based methods to predict potential bioactivity. This has potential for quick hypothesis testing and triage of ideas, as well as highlighting potential molecules for rare and neglected diseases, in which the resources are limited for testing. Computational Approaches Used With Industry Provided Repurposing Candidates - Uses in Rare and Neglected Diseases Sean Ekins 1,2, Christopher Southan 3, Michael Travers 1, Antony J. Williams 4, Joel S. Freundlich 5, 6, Barry A. Bunin 1 and Alex M. Clark 7 1 Collaborative Drug Discovery, 1633 Bayshore Hwy, Suite 342, Burlingame, CA 94010, U.S.A., 2 Collaborations in Chemistry, 5616 Hilltop Needmore Road, Fuquay Varina, NC 27526, U.S.A., 3 TW2Informatics Limited, Goteborg, 42166, Sweden, 4 Royal Society of Chemistry, 904 Tamaras Circle, Wake Forest, NC 27587, USA. 5 Department of Medicine, Center for Emerging and Reemerging Pathogens, UMDNJ – New Jersey Medical School, 185 South Orange Avenue Newark, NJ 07103, USA. 6 Department of Microbiology, Immunology and Pathology, Colorado State University, 200 West Lake Street, CO 80523, USA. 6 Molecular Materials Informatics, 1900 St. Jacques #302, Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3J 2S1. Box 1. Data sources Compounds ODDT CDD TW2Informatics Limited Methods and Results We have previously described in detail the painstaking process to curate the molecules [2]. 41 NCATS compounds and 12 MRC compounds were identified with structures (see box). These molecules were then tweeted from the Mobile Molecular DataSheet and can be readily accessed in the Open Drug Discovery Teams mobile app ([3] Figure 1) These molecules were scored with three M. tuberculosis Bayesian Models [4,5] and a malaria model developed in Discovery Studio (Accelrys, San Diego CA). The molecules have also been uploaded in a CDD vault [6] and used via an API to connect with similar molecules (>0.8 Tanimoto similarity) in ChEMBL. This has enabled us to predict potential targets for the compounds (Figure 2) and provide links to these. We have also assessed the commercial availability of the molecules from vendors and added the information in CDD. To date we have ordered 3 molecules predicted to have some M. tuberculosis activity and these include a known kinase inhibitor (Figure 3). These will be tested in vitro against potential bacterial targets as described previously [4,5]. Figure 1. How the Open Drug Discovery Teams App can be used to visualize molecules, in this case the MRC and NCATS compounds tweeted from the Mobile Molecular DataSheet App. Figure 2. How CDD can be used to visualize the MRC and NCATS molecules, and via the API suggest potential targets in ChEMBL with similarity based on the closest molecules associated with targets. Discussion We have identified molecular structures for the majority of MRC and NCATS compounds included in the industry provided repurposing candidate datasets that were not available previously [2]. We have demonstrated how mobile apps [3] and collaborative software [6] can be used to share the molecules and data (Box 1) as well as to suggest new uses for the compounds, currently under evaluation. All of these technologies and the datasets we have created are accessible now. If we are to enable in silico approaches to be used as described here for repurposing candidates, it is important that such efforts in future release the structures to prevent replication of efforts and errors [7]. Our ongoing work will aim to identify whether selected compounds have activity against neglected and rare diseases and accelerate this discovery process. Such computational tools may represent a disruptive strategy involving active collaboration [8]. References [1] Ekins S, Williams AJ, Krasowski MD and Freundlich JS, In silico repositioning of approved drugs for rare and neglected diseases, Drug Disc Today, 16: , [2] Southan C, Williams AJ and Ekins S, Challenges and Recommendations for obtaining chemical structures of industry provided repurposing candidates, Drug Disc Today, 18: 58-70, [3] Ekins S, Clark AM and Williams AJ, Open Drug Discovery Teams: A Chemistry Mobile App for Collaboration, Mol Informatics, 31: , [4] Ekins S, Reynolds RC, Kim H, Koo M-S, Ekonomidis M, Talaue M, Paget SD, Woolhiser LK Lenaerts AJ, Bunin BA, Connell N and Freundlich JS. Novel Bayesian leveraging bioactivity and cytotoxicity information for drug discovery, Chem Biol, In Press [5] Ekins S, Reynolds RC,, Franzblau SG, Wan B, Freundlich JS and Bunin BA. Enhancing hit identification in Mycobacterium tuberculosis drug discovery using validated dual-event Bayesian models, Submitted 2012 [6] Hohman M, Gregory K, Chibale K, Smith PJ, Ekins S and Bunin B, Novel web-based tools combining chemistry informatics, biology and social networks for drug discovery, Drug Disc Today, 14: , [7] Williams AJ, Ekins S and Tkachenko V, Towards a Gold Standard: Regarding Quality in Public Domain Chemistry Databases and Approaches to Improving the Situation, Drug Discovery Today,17 (13-14): , [8] Ekins S, Waller CL, Bradley MP, Clark AM and Williams AJ, Four disruptive strategies for removing drug discovery bottlenecks, Drug Discovery Today, In Press Funding The CDD API was supported by Award Number 2R42AI “Identification of novel therapeutics for tuberculosis combining cheminformatics, diverse databases and logic based pathway analysis” from the National Institutes of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Figure 2. Using CDD to visualize the MRC and NCATS molecules, the predictions from TB Bayesian models and commercial availability.