Advances in Medicinal Chemistry

Advances in Medicinal Chemistry
Author: B.E. Maryanoff
Publisher: Elsevier
Total Pages: 338
Release: 1999-04-01
Genre: Science
ISBN: 0080526373

Volume 4 of Advances in Medicinal Chemistry is comprised of six chapters on a wide range of topics in medicinal chemistry, including molecular modeling, structure-based drug design, organic synthesis, peptide conformational analysis, biological assessment, structure-activity correlation, and lead optimization. Chapter 1 presents an account about amino acid-based peptide mimetics corresponding to b-turn, loop, helical motifs in proteins as a probe of ligand-receptor and ligand-enzyme molecular interactions. Chapter 2 addresses new facets of the medicinal chemistry of the important anticancer drug Taxol® (paclitaxel). Chapter 3 relates an account of the search for new drugs for the treatment of malaria based on the natural product artemisinin. Chapter 4 applies computational chemistry to the evaluation of compound libraries for biological testing. Chapter 5 describes the construction of a 3-dimensional molecular model of the human thrombin receptor, the first protease-activated G-protein coupled receptor (PAR-1), as a means to explore the intermolecular contacts involved in agonist peptide recognition. Finally, Chapter 6 describes the research conducted at Merck on inhibitors of farnesyl transferase as a potential treatment for human cancers.

Receptors

Receptors
Author: Clare Stanford
Publisher:
Total Pages: 0
Release: 2023
Genre: Cell receptors
ISBN: 9781383050165

Molecules can only enter cells via receptors, and thus are the subject of much attention. This new edition is a comprehensive review of new methods that can be used for studying receptors and how each technique can be used on different receptor types.

Murder, Magic, and Medicine

Murder, Magic, and Medicine
Author: John Mann
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 232
Release: 1994
Genre: Health & Fitness
ISBN: 9780198558545

This absorbing account of the evolution of modern medicine from its roots in folk medicine will entertain and inform both scientist and general reader alike. It explains the chemical basis of pharmacology, and provides a fascinating description of how the use and abuse of natural products in various societies throughout the ages has led to the development of many of the drugs we now take for granted.