Grant will
fund research
into new drug-discovery methods
An NC State researcher
has received a $747,000 grant from the National Institutes of Health
(NIH) to launch a research
project devoted to helping scientists discover new drugs more efficiently.
Dr. Jacqueline Hughes-Oliver, professor of statistics in the College
of Physical and Mathematical Sciences, was awarded the grant to lead
efforts in developing statistical and computational methods to identify
compounds that may be developed into medicines.
Being able to model relationships between chemical structure and activity
creates an important shortcut in the normally time- and labor-intensive
drug-discovery process. Instead of trial and error, scientists can use
computer modeling to determine more quickly what chemicals hold promise
for use in disease-treating medications.
This increase in efficiency would allow scientists to develop drugs
more quickly, and increase the number of drugs being considered at a
given time.
Because this process would
be quicker and cheaper than conventional drug discovery, it may also
lead to decreased costs that may be passed
on to patients. More importantly, it would make drug-discovery efforts
for rare diseases more cost-effective for pharmaceutical companies
to pursue.
“This effort is the newest example of our department’s 64-year
commitment to interdisciplinary research,” said Dr. Sastry Pantula,
head of the Department of Statistics. “This initiative will bring
chemists and computer scientists together with statisticians to work
as a team on important scientific problems.”
Other NC State faculty members involved in the research include Dr.
Morteza Khaledi of the chemistry department, Dr. Robert Funderlic of
the computer science department, and Dr. Gary Howell of the information
technology department.
The work is funded by the
National Institutes of Health through the NIH Roadmap for Medical Research,
Grant 1 P20 HG003900-01. Information on the Molecular
Libraries Roadmap Initiative can be obtained here.
Posted
Nov. 18, 2005
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