Remove Drugs Remove Pharmacokinetics Remove Small Molecule
article thumbnail

New drug triggers rapid cell death in cancer models

Broad Institute

New drug triggers rapid cell death in cancer models By Karen Zusi-Tran October 29, 2024 Breadcrumb Home New drug triggers rapid cell death in cancer models BRD-810 inhibits the MCL1 protein and reactivates apoptosis in tumor cells, displaying therapeutic potential in animal models. The result was the compound named BRD-810.

Drugs 133
article thumbnail

Metabolism of 2023 FDA Approved Small Molecules – PART 2

Metabolite Tales Blog

Where data was publicly available, the routes of human metabolism for each of the drugs in this subset is listed in Table 1. Metabolites found in humans are also observed in monkeys, and all metabolites were found to possess <10% of the activity of the parent drug. of the administered radiolabel in the human ADME study.

Insiders

Sign Up for our Newsletter

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

article thumbnail

Metabolism of 2023 FDA Approved Small Molecules – PART 1

Metabolite Tales Blog

Metabolism of 2023 FDA Approved Small Molecules – PART 1 By Julia Shanu-Wilson 2023 was a fruitful year for drug approvals by the FDA, with a crop of 34 small molecules out of a total of 55 new drugs [1]. Enzymes involved include CYP1A2, CYP2C8, CYP3A4, CYP4F2, and aldehyde oxidase (AOX).

article thumbnail

Metabolism of 2022 FDA approved small molecule drugs PART 2

Metabolite Tales Blog

Metabolism of 2022 FDA approved small molecule drugs part 2 Mixing it Up By Julia Shanu-Wilson In Part 1 of this topic we looked at metabolism of the small molecule drugs approved by the FDA in 2022 that were mediated by CYP3A4.

article thumbnail

Antibody-drug conjugates payloads: then, now and next

Drug Target Review

Antibody-drug conjugates (ADCs) have been a groundbreaking approach to cancer treatment with their ability to deliver cytotoxic drugs directly to diseased cells while sparing healthy tissues. 1 However, efforts proved less effective than the original drugs, owing mostly to insufficient toxicity against cancer cells.

article thumbnail

A Cross-Functional Mindset in DMPK

Drug Hunter

Dian Su’s journey from chemistry and proteomics to the DMPK of drug conjugates Following a different path comes naturally to Dian Su, Senior Director of DMPK at Bicycle Therapeutics. In her small molecule DMPK research, proteomics also served to identify reactive metabolites (e.g., Proteomics!

article thumbnail

How GPCR agonists, including antibodies, are shaping the future of metabolic care

Drug Target Review

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) represent a cornerstone of modern drug discovery due to their crucial role in regulating human physiology and their involvement in numerous diseases. In the early days, each GPCR target required its own structure-modulating ConfoBody to be identified before starting any drug discovery.