Over the last decade, for the first time, substantial efforts have been directed at the development of dedicated in silico platforms for drug repurposing, including initiatives targeting cancers and conditions as diverse as cryptosporidiosis, dengue, dental caries, diabetes, herpes, lupus, malaria, tuberculosis and Covid-19 related respiratory disease. This review outlines some of the exciting advances in the specific applications of in silico approaches to the challenge of drug repurposing and focuses particularly on where these efforts have resulted in the development of generic platform technologies of broad value to researchers involved in programmatic drug repurposing work. Recent advances in molecular docking methodologies and validation approaches, and their combination with machine learning or deep learning approaches are continually enhancing the precision of repurposing efforts. The meaningful integration of better understanding of molecular mechanisms with molecular pathway data and knowledge of disease networks is widening the scope for discovery of repurposing opportunities. The power of Artificial Intelligence is being gainfully exploited to advance progress in an integrated science that extends from the sub-atomic to the whole system level. There are many promising emerging developments but there are remaining challenges to be overcome in the successful integration of the new advances in useful platforms. In conclusion, the essential component requirements for development of powerful and well optimised drug repurposing screening platforms are discussed.
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Cover Image
Cover Image
The flower represents the Drosophila testis niche with the hub cells at the center. Each petal of the flower represents Germline stem cells (GSCs) with a large and a smaller purple circle representing centromere; green rays representing stronger centromeres preferentially attach to the niche. Red and green caterpillars represent sister chromatids in prometaphase with separable old and new H3 in GSCs. Further, large butterflies closer to the flower represent prometaphase GSCs with a red wing vs a green wing representing non-overlapping old and new H3. Small orange butterflies away from the flower represent prophase gonialblast cells with overlapping old and new H3 signals. The background is from coiled sperm from the fly testis. Cover art generated by Professor Tim Phelps.
Drug repurposing in silico screening platforms
Jonathan G.L. Mullins; Drug repurposing in silico screening platforms. Biochem Soc Trans 29 April 2022; 50 (2): 747–758. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BST20200967
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