February 25 - March 1, 2023
San Diego, CA, USA
February 25 - March 1, 2023
San Diego, CA, USA
With the advent of high-throughput, structure-assisted and virtual screening, an argument could be made that every target is now druggable. However, with an estimated 600-1500 possible druggable genes related to disease, the bottleneck now is judicious target choice; coupled with this is the choice of discovery strategy (target- vs system-based). This course discusses the pharmacological techniques available to relate targets to therapeutic opportunity, applications of new ideas to re-visit mined out or apparently intractable targets, validation beyond targets (pathway-validation) and strategies to improve the disappointing 50% efficacy failure rate for new drug candidates.
Terry Kenakin
UNC School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC
After obtaining a B.S. in chemistry and Ph.D. in Pharmacology at the University of Alberta, Dr. Kenakin worked for three years at University College London UK with Sir James Black. From there he spent 32 years in industry (Sever at Burroughs-Wellcome, 25 at GlaxoSmithKline). He is currently a Professor at the University of North Carolina School of Medicine. His interests have always been in quantitative pharmacodynamics and the discovery of new drugs and he has worked on projects for AIDS, heart failure and metabolic diseases. He is editor and chief of Journal of Receptors and Signal Transduction, and co-Editor in Chief of Current Opinion in Pharmacology. He has written 12 books on pharmacology.