developing purpose antimalarial drug leadscrnd/brochures/brochure_malaria.pdf · dr. olaf wiest...
TRANSCRIPT
Purpose Developing
antimalarial drug leads
Malaria is a blood disease that kills nearly 1 million people each year. New medicines are needed since the parasites that cause disease are becoming increasingly resistant to current antimalarial therapies. The Center for Rare and Neglected Diseases at the University of Notre Dame forged a partnership with Eli Lilly and Company and with Medicines for Malaria Venture to find new antimalarial medicines.
Our aim is to mirror the
industrial discovery phase but
at a smaller, academic scale.
CRND is setting up a high
throughput screening facility
on-campus with a Hamilton
StarLet Liquid Handling
Station integrating with a high-
content Acumen microscope.
Scientists in CRND are
working with Lilly scientists to
ensure that biological tests meet
the highest quality standards.
Malaria Drug Discovery
and Development
Center for Rare and Neglected Diseases
107 Galvin Life Sciences Notre Dame, IN 46556
nd.edu/~crnd
Center for Rare and Neglected
Diseases
CRND Leadership
Public-Private Partnerships in action
1
Through a public-private partnership, we have screened a select Lilly chemical library to develop potential new medicines. Eli Lilly and Company has not only provided its library, which links chemical structures to biological information, it has also provided valuable drug discovery expertise. Medicines for Malaria Venture, a global pharmaceutical cooperative committed to the eradication of malaria, links academic scientists with resources to accelerate antimalarial drug discovery. From over 110,000 compounds
Dr. Kasturi Haldar Director of the Center for Rare and Neglected Diseases Dr. Pamela Tamez Director of External Programs Steering Committee Dr. Basar Bilgicer Assistant Professor Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering
Dr. Jesus Izaguirre Associate Professor Department of Computer Science and Engineering
Dr. Jeff Schorey Professor Department of Biological Sciences
Dr. Olaf Wiest Professor Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry
2
tested, nearly 300 are promising. They are potent and selectively inhibit malaria parasite growth but not that of human cells. Now that the first round of testing is complete, confirmatory assays of the active compounds are underway. All actives will be cross-referenced with information from the Lilly chemical database. With this added knowledge, we at CRND aim to identify the best candidates to put into pre-clinical development.