2. DEFINITIONS :
ďą DRUG â Any chemical substance which is used in
treatment, cure, prevention, or diagnosis of disease
is known as drug.
ďą DRUG DISCOVERY PROCESS â It is a process by
which new candidate medications is/are discovered.
ďą DRUG DEVELOPMENT PROCESSâ It is a process of
bringing a new pharmaceutical drug to the market
once a lead compound has been identified through
the process of drug discovery.
3. STAGES OF NEW DRUG DEVELOPMENT PROCESS
ď DRUG DISCOVERY- Candidate molecules are
chosen on the basis of their pharmacological
properties.
ď PRECLINICAL DEVELOMENT- Non-human studies
(e.g.- toxicity testing, pharmacokinetic analysis and
formulations) are performed.
ď CLINICAL DEVELOPMENT- The selected compound
is tested for efficacy, side-effects and potential
dangers.
4.
5.
6. INTRODUCTION
PREDISCOVERY â
o It includes understanding the disease.
o Identify cellular and genetic factors.
o Need to know which gene(s) are involved and
how they interact.
11. HOW DRUGS ARE DISCOVERED ?
⢠Choose a disease
⢠Choose a drug target
⢠Identify a âbioassayâ
bioassay = A test used to
determine biological activity.
12. ⢠Find a âlead compoundâ
âlead compoundâ = structure that
has some activity against the chosen
target, but not yet good enough to be
the drug itself.
⢠If not known, determine the
structure of the âlead compoundâ.
⢠Synthesize analogs of the lead.
13. ⢠Identify Structure-Activity-
Relationships (SARâs).
⢠Identify the âpharmacophoreâ
pharmacophore = the structural
features directly responsible for
activity.
⢠Optimize structure to improve
interactions with target.
14. ⢠Determine toxicity and efficacy in animal
models.
⢠Determine pharmacodynamics and
pharmacokinetics of the drug.
15. ⢠Continue to study drug metabolism
⢠Carry out clinical trials
⢠Market the drug
16. ARTEMISININ
ďą Artemisinin (also known as qinghao su)
and its derivatives are a new class of
Antimalarials, derived from the sweet
wormwood plant Artemisia annua L.,
which belongs to the family
Asteraceae.
ďą Artemisinin was discovered in 1972 by Tu Youyou, a Chinese scientist,
who was co-recipient of the 2015 Nobel Prize in Medicine for her
discovery of artemisinin.
17. ďą Extracts from different parts of plant (leaves, branches, main stem
and roots) were analyzed, artemisinin content was higher in the leaf
extract and no artemisinin was detected in root extract.
ďą The first effective antimalarial drug was quinine; since then, malaria
has been treated with quinoline-based drugs like chloroquine,
mefloquine, and pyrimethamine, but malaria parasite developed
resistance to these drugs [1â3].
ďą Artemisinin and its derivatives have played a key role in malaria
related mortality.
ďą Due to the problem of resistance, artemisinin and its semisynthetic
derivatives artemether, arteether, dihydroartemisinin and artesunate
are considered to be the most effective for the treatment of malaria.
18. Physicochemical properties
⢠Artemisinin is white needle-like crystals.
⢠M.P. = 151â153 °C
⢠Molecular formula = C15H22O5
⢠Insoluble in water but dissolves in acetone,
ethanol, ether, petroleum ether and alkali solution.
⢠It reacts with triphenylphosphine to give
triphenylphosphine oxide. This reaction indicate
existence of an oxidative group in the molecule.
22. ANDROGRAPHOLIDE
ďą Andrographolide is a potential cancer therapeutic agent
isolated from the leaves and roots of Andrographis
paniculata Nees. It belongs to the family Acanthaceae.
ďą Ethnobotanically used for the treatment of snake bite,
bug bite, fever, and malaria [4].
ďą Because of its extreme bitterness, it is also called
âking of bitters.â
ďą The primary bioactive compound of andrographolide is
responsible for antimalarial activity.
ďą The principal constituents are 14-deoxy-11-
dehydroandrographolide, 14-deoxy-11-
oxoandrographolide, andrographolide,
andrographine, neoandrographolide, panicoline,
paniculide-A, paniculide-B, and paniculide-C , a
plant originating from Southeast Asian countries.
23. ďą Andrographis paniculata have a broad range of pharmacological
effects including â
ďź anticancer [5â12]
ďź antidiarrheal [13, 14]
ďź antihepatitis [15, 16]
ďź anti-HIV [17]
ďź antihyperglycemic [18â21]
ďź anti-inflammatory [22â26]
ďź antimicrobial, antimalarial [27, 28]
ďź antioxidant [29â31]
ďź cardiovascular [32, 33]
ďź cytotoxic
ďź hepatoprotective [34â45]
ďź immunostimulatory
ďź sexual dysfunctions.
24. Biosynthesis
⢠Andrographolide is a simple diterpene lactone.
⢠Andrographolide is a member of the isoprenoid family of natural products.
⢠The precursors to isoprenoid biosynthesis, isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP)
and dimethylally pyrophosphate (DMAPP), can be synthesized through either
the mevalonic acid pathway (MVA) or deoxyxylulose pathway (DXP).
⢠Majority of the andrographolide precursors are synthesized through the DXP
pathway.
⢠The biosynthesis of andrographolide begins with the addition of IPP to DMAPP,
which forms geranyl pyrophosphate.
⢠Another molecule of IPP is then added, yielding farnesyl pyrophosphate (FPP).
⢠The final IPP molecule is added to the FPP to complete the backbone of the
diterpene.
⢠The double bond originating from DMAPP is oxidized to an epoxide prior to the ring
closing cascade that forms two six-membered rings.
25.
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