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Advances in Medicinal Chemistry

B.E. Maryanoff (Edited by), A.B. Reitz (Edited by)

9780762300648

Hardback, published 1 April 1999

321 pages
23.3 x 15.6 x 2.4 cm, 0.68 kg

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.

Preface. Novel peptide mimetic building blocks and strategies for efficient lead finding. Recent advances in the medicinal chemistry of taxoid anticancer agents. Synthesis and structure-activity relationships of peroxidic antimalarials based on artemisinin. Design of compound libraries for detecting and pursuing novel small molecule leads. A theoretical model of the human thrombin receptor (PAR-1), the first known protease-activated G-protein-coupled receptor. Farnesyl transferase inhibitors: design of a new class of cancer chemotherapeutic agents.

Subject Areas: Chemistry [PN], Medical toxicology [MMGT], Pharmacology [MMG]

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