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Can biochemistry drive drug discovery beyond simple potency measurements?

Journal

DRUG DISCOVERY TODAY
Volume 17, Issue 7-8, Pages 388-395

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.drudis.2012.01.022

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Among the fields of expertise required to develop drugs successfully, biochemistry holds a key position in drug discovery at the interface between chemistry, structural biology and cell biology. However, taking the example of protein kinases, it appears that biochemical assays are mostly used in the pharmaceutical industry to measure compound potency and/or selectivity. This limited use of biochemistry is surprising, given that detailed biochemical analyses are commonly used in academia to unravel molecular recognition processes. In this article, I show that biochemistry can provide invaluable information on the dynamics and energetics of compound-target interactions that cannot be obtained on the basis of potency measurements and structural data. Therefore, an extensive use of biochemistry in drug discovery could facilitate the identification and/or development of new drugs.

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