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โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

[Topics in Medicinal Chemistry] Reducing Drug Attrition Volume 11 || Optimizing Pharmacokinetic Properties and Attaining Candidate Selection

โœ Scribed by Empfield, James R.; P Clark, Michael


Book ID
127339801
Publisher
Springer Berlin Heidelberg
Year
2012
Tongue
German
Weight
342 KB
Edition
2014
Category
Article
ISBN
366243914X

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โœฆ Synopsis


Medicinal chemistry is both science and art. The science of medicinal chemistry offers mankind one of its best hopes for improving the quality of life. The art of medicinal chemistry continues to challenge its practitioners with the need for both intuition and experience to discover new drugs. Hence sharing the experience of drug research is uniquely beneficial to the field of medicinal chemistry. Drug research requires interdisciplinary team-work at the interface between chemistry, biology and medicine. Therefore, the topic-related series Topics in Medicinal Chemistry covers all relevant aspects of drug research, e.g. pathobiochemistry of diseases, identification and validation of (emerging) drug targets, structural biology, drugability of targets, drug design approaches, chemogenomics, synthetic chemistry including combinatorial methods, bioorganic chemistry, natural compounds, high-throughput screening, pharmacological in vitro and in vivo investigations, drug-receptor interactions on the molecular level, structure-activity relationships, drug absorption, distribution, metabolism, elimination, toxicology and pharmacogenomics. In general, special volumes are edited by well known guest editors.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


[Topics in Medicinal Chemistry] Reducing
โœ Empfield, James R.; P Clark, Michael ๐Ÿ“‚ Article ๐Ÿ“… 2013 ๐Ÿ› Springer Berlin Heidelberg ๐ŸŒ German โš– 141 KB

Medicinal chemistry is both science and art. The science of medicinal chemistry offers mankind one of its best hopes for improving the quality of life. The art of medicinal chemistry continues to challenge its practitioners with the need for both intuition and experience to discover new drugs. Hence