Title: Drug Discovery
1Drug Discovery
- Shu-Jen Chen, Ph.D.
- Molecular Medicine Research Center
- Chang Gung University
- Nov. 22, 2006
2Outline
- Why do we need new drugs?
- How do we get new drugs?
- The process
- The investment
- The risk
- The bottlenecks
- New Technology for drug discovery
- Target validation
- High-throughput chemistry
- High-throughput screening
- Computer-aided drug design
- Example of Target-based therapy Gleevec
3Why do we need new drugs?
- Current therapy is unsatisfactory
- Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease
- Cancer
- Multiple sclerosis
- Current therapy has sever side effects
- Antipsychotic, anti-inflammatory, asthma
- Drug resistance
- Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus
(MRSA) - Vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE)
- Multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis (MDR TB)
- Emerging new diseases
- Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE)
- SARS
4Drug Discovery The Process
5Drug Discovery The Investment
16 years US900M (NT2.7B)
Discovery (2-10 years)
Preclinical Testing Laboratory and animal testing
Phase I 20-80 healthy volunteers used
to determine safety and dosage
Phase II 100-300 patient volunteers used to look
for efficacy and side effects
Phase III 1,000-5,000 patient volunteers used to
monitor adverse reactions to long-term use
FDA Review/ Approval
Additional Post-marketing Testing
6Drug Discovery The Risk
Compound No
Discovery
10000
500
30
Development
15
10
3
Market
7Drug Discovery The Bottlenecks
Genomic Sciences
High Throughput Screening
High Throughput Chemistry
High Throughput Chemistry
8Modern Technology for Drug Discovery
9Target Selection
Target identification to identify molecular
targets that are involved in disease
progression Target validation to prove that
manipulating the molecular target can provide
therapeutic benefit for patients Criteria
safety and long-term efficacy
10Biochemical Classes of Drug Targets
11Technologies for Target Selection
- Genomic Analysis
- Gene scan (gene mapping)
- Whole genome sequencing
- Positional cloning
- Transcriptional Analysis
- Differential display
- Microarray (gene chip)
- EST database analysis
- Quantitative PCR
- RNA in situ hybridization
- Proteomic Analysis
- 2D-PAGE
- Mass spectrum
- Functional Analysis
- Overexpression
- Gene Knockdown
- Gene knockout
- Transgenic mice system
- siRNA technology
- Antibodies
12Compound Library
- Synthetic chemicals
- Random library (100,000 1,000,000)
- Focused library (1,000)
- Structure-based design library (lt 1,000)
- Marketed drugs (lt 2,000)
- Natural products
- Purified natural chemical library (2,000-5,000)
- Natural product extracts (mixtures)
13Parallel Synthesis
1 core structure
3 x 3 9 analogs
3 analogs
14Solid Phase Synthesis
15High-throughput Screening
16Cell-based vs. Enzyme-based Assay
17High Density Microtiter Plates
18Automated Robotic System
Beckman ORCA
Beckman Core System
19Data Integration
Import assay results
20Docking compounds into proteins computationally
21Principle of molecular docking
Low free energy
Stable complex
22Ser144
Ser144
Cys145
Cys145
Gly143
Gly143
P1
P1
His41
His41
P3
P2
P3
P2
Asp48
Glu166
Asp48
Glu166
Met165
Met165
Met49
Pro168
Met49
Pro168
P4
P4
Ala191
Ala191
Activity 35 nM
Activity 2 uM
23Example of Targeted Therapy Gleevec for CML
24Leukemia
- Most common blood cancer
- Four major types
- Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML),
- Chronic Lymphocytic Leukemia (CLL),
- Chronic Myeloid Leukemia (CML),
- Acute Lymphocytic Leukemia (ALL)
25Clinical Course of CML
26Epidemiology of CML
- Median age range 45-55 years
- Male-to-female ratio1.3 1
- 50 diagnosed by routine lab tests85 diagnosed
during the chronic phase
27Treatment for CML
- Bone marrow transplant (BMT, 10 yr survival
54-57) - The only known and proven curative therapy
- Cure rate for young patients (30-40 y/o) is
approximately 50-60 - The motality rate for BMT ranges from 15-25 for
an ideal candidate, while an old patients (gt40
y/o) has a mortality rate of 30-50 - Only 15-20 of CML patients are candidates for
BMT (limited by the age and the lack of HLA
mathced donors) - Conventional chemotherapy (palliative only, 10 yr
survival 12-25) - IFN-a therapy alone (10 yr survival 17-49,
discontinuation rate 31) - IFN-a with Ara-C (discontinuation rate 50)
28Prevalence of the Philadelphia Chromosome in
Hematologic Malignancies
Leukemia of Ph Patients CML 95 ALL
(Adult) 1530 ALL (Pediatric) 5 AML 2
Faderl S et al. Oncology (Huntingt).
199913169-184.
29What is the Philadelphia chromosome?
A balanced translocation of Chr 22 and Chr 9
30Translocation of Bcr/Abl
Molecular Biology of the Cell, Albert et al, 2001
31Targeting Bcr/Abl for CML Treatment
- Abl is a tightly regulated tyrosine kinase
- v-Abl is a constitutively active tyrosine kinase
- v-Abl transforms NIH3T3 cells in high efficiency
- Bar/Abl fusion protein also display constitutive
tyrosine kinase activity - Bcr/Abl alone is sufficient to cause CML in
experimental animals - Altered adhesion to stromal cells and the
extracellular matrix - Constitutively active signal
- Decreased apoptosis
32Chemical optimization of Gleevec
phenylamino core structure
amide group To enhance activity
against tyrosine kinase
pyridyl group - to improve cellular penetration
N-methyl piperazine To increase water
solubility and bioavailability
flag methyl To reduce activity against Protein
kinase C
33Inhibition of Kinase Activity by Gleevec
- STI571 potently inhibited ABL tyrosine kinases
- STI571 also inhibited PDGF-R and c-KIT
- STI571 showed no inhition towards most Ser/Thr
kinase
34In Vitro Selectivity of Gleevec
- STI571 at 1 uM effectively killed
bcr/abl-overexpressing 32D cells - STI571 at 10 uM showed no toxicity towards 32D
cells and 32D cells overexpressing v-Src
35In Vivo Efficacy of Gleevec
- Model mice injected with 32D-Bcr/Abl (A) or
32D-v-Src (B) - Dosing d11-d18, ip
36Gleevec Phase I Trial Design
- Druker, et al (2001).
- Dose-escalating study of Gleevec (n83)
- Dose range from 25 mg-1000 mg/ day po
- Primary Endpoint?Safety, Tolerability of Gleevec
- Secondary Endpoints?Antileukemic Activity
- Hematologic Response gt50 ? in WBC count X2 wks
- Complete Hem Response ? WBC to lt10,000 Plt
gt450,000 - Cytogenic Response of Ph cells (conversion to
normal)
37Gleevec Phase I Trial Results
- Hematologic Response
- 98 of pts receiving gt300 mg/day had a complete
hematologic response - Cytogenic Response
- 54 of pts receiving gt300 mg/day had some
cytogenic response - 31 had major cytogenic responses
- 13 had complete cytogenic remissions
38Gleevec Phase I Study
150
- Time to normalization of WBC
- Dose 500 mg/day
39Gleevec Phase II Study
- Drucker et al (2001)
- Antileukemic activity and safety of Gleevec in
Ph CML in blast crisis and Ph ALL - Doses 300 mg-1000mg po qd
- Outcomes
- -Hematologic Responses
- -Marrow Responses
- -Cytogenic Responses
40Response to Gleevec in blast crisis and
accelerated phases of CML
- Gleevec was approved as 2nd line CML treatment
for IFN failure patients - The review process took only 72 days a record
for anticancer drug
41Gleevec vs. IFN-a Ara-C in newly diagnosed
patients with CML
- Gleevec was approved as 1st line treatment for CML
42Gleevec 50 years from Discovery to Delivery
43Dosage and Cost
- Dosage
- 400 mg/day in Chronic Phase CML
- 600 mg/day in Accelerated/Blast Crisis
- Cost
- 2400/ month (400 mg/day)
- Not covered by insurance
44Advantage of Gleevec
- Gleevec as 1st line therapy for CML
- 6 years increased survival over interferon-alpha
treatment - 43,100 per life year saved
- Specifically targets an enzyme in cancer cells,
not normal healthy cells - Minimal side effects compared to other treatments
- Given orally instead of injections
45(No Transcript)
46Side Effects of Gleevec
- Fluid retention
- Nausea and Vomiting
- Muscle Cramps
- Hemorrhage
- Diarrhea
- Rash
- Indigestion
- Headache
- Joint Pain
Discoutinuation rate - Gleevec 3.5 - IFN
31 - IFN Ara-C 50
47How Effective is Gleevec?
- Gleevec is more effective in chronic phase CML
48Resistance Issue
- Very effective
- Less toxic
- Resistance pose a problem
mutation
Gleevec
Bcr/Abl protein
49Mechamisms of Gleevec Resistance
50Why do we need new drugs?
- Current therapy is unsatisfactory
- Alzheimers disease, Parkinsons disease
- Cancer
- Multiple sclerosis
- Current therapy has sever side effects
- Antipsychotic, anti-inflammatory, asthma
- Drug resistance
- Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus Aureus
(MRSA) - Vancomycin-resistant Enterococci (VRE)
- Multidrug-resistant Tuberculosis (MDR TB)
- Emerging new diseases
- Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy (BSE)
- SARS
51Next Generation Kinase Inhibitor