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Case studies of 20 successful FDA-approved drugs, from biological rationale to clinical efficacy studies and state-of-the-art applications Chemistry and Pharmacology of Drug Discovery illustrates how chemistry, biology, pharmacokinetics, and a host of disciplines come together to produce successful medicines, discussing a total of 20 drugs that are all FDA-approved post 2021--some of which are first-in-class and revolutionary. The four sections in this book cover Infectious Disease, Cancer Drugs, CNS Drugs, and Miscellaneous Drugs. Each chapter covers background material on the drug class and/or disease indication and key aspects relevant to the discovery of the drug, including structure-activity relationships, pharmacokinetics, drug metabolism, efficacy, and safety. This book is contributed to by various veterans and well-known experts in medical chemistry, many of whom discovered the drugs they reviewed, leading to tremendous quality and depth of insight. Some of the drugs covered in Chemistry and Pharmacology of Drug Discovery include: Nirmatrelvir (Paxlovid with Ritonavir), a 3-chymotrypsin-like protease inhibitor for treating SARS-CoV-2 infection Doravirine (Pifeltro), a third-generation non-nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitor for the treatment of HIV-1 infection Oteseconazole (Vivjoa), a CYP51 inhibitor for treating recurrent vulvovaginal candidiasis, and Rimegepant (Nurtec ODT), a CGRP antagonist for treating migraine Ciprofol (Cipepofol), a γ-Aminobutyric acid receptor agonist for induction of anesthesia, and Ozanimod (Zeposia), an S1P receptor antagonist for treating multiple sclerosis Deucravacitinib (Sotyktu), a first-in-class deuterated TYK2 inhibitor for the treatment of plaque psoriasis Chemistry and Pharmacology of Drug Discovery serves as an excellent and highly authoritative learning resource for medicinal, organic, synthetic, and process chemists as well as research scientists in lead optimization and process development.
In dieser sechsten Auflage von Jack Jie Lis bahnbrechendem Werk "Namensreaktionen" hat der Autor jeweils drei oder mehr Anwendungen in der Synthese zu den Namensreaktionen hinzugefügt, um den jüngsten Fortschritten in der organischen Chemie Rechnung zu tragen. Wie in den vorherigen Ausgaben wird jede Reaktion durch ihren detaillierten Schritt-für-Schritt-Mechanismus beschrieben und mit den ursprünglichen und neuesten Referenzen, insbesondere aus Übersichtsartikeln, ergänzt. Dieses Buch ist nicht nur ein unverzichtbares Hilfsmittel für fortgeschrittene Studenten und Doktoranden zum Lernen und zur Prüfungsvorbereitung, sondern auch ein gutes Nachschlagewerk für alle organischen Chemiker:innen in Industrie und Wissenschaft. Im Gegensatz zu anderen Büchern über Namensreaktionen in der organischen Chemie konzentriert sich Namensreaktionen, Eine Sammlung von detaillierten Mechanismen und synthetischen Anwendungen auf die Reaktionsmechanismen. Es behandeltüber 300 klassische und moderne Namensreaktionen.Die Übersetzung wurde mit künstlicher Intelligenz erstellt. Um eine hohe Qualität der Übersetzung zu gewährleisten, wurde sie anschließend durch den Autor (mit der freundlichen Unterstützung von Felix Katzenberg) inhaltlich geprüft und ggf. überarbeitet. In stilistischer Hinsicht kann sie sich dennoch von einer herkömmlichen Übersetzung unterscheiden.
I don't have my name on anything that I don't really do. -Heidi Klum Can the organic chemists associated with so-called "e;Named Reactions"e; make the same claim as supermodel Heidi Klum? Many scholars of chemistry do not hesitate to point out that the names associated with "e;name reactions"e; are often not the actual inventors. For instance, the Arndt-Eistert reaction has nothing to do with either Arndt or Eistert, Pummerer did not discover the "e;Pummerer"e; rearrangement, and even the famous Birch reduction owes its initial discovery to someone named Charles Wooster (first reported in a DuPont patent). The list goes on and on... But does that mean we should ignore, boycott, or outlaw "e;named reactions"e;? Absolutely not. The above examples are merely exceptions to the rule. In fact, the chemists associated with name reactions are typically the original discoverers, contribute greatly to its general use, and/or are the first to popularize the transformation. Regardless of the controversial history underlying certain named reactions, it is the students of organic chemistry who benefit the most from the cataloging of reactions by name. Indeed, it is with education in mind that Dr. Jack Li has masterfully brought the chemical community the latest edition of Name Reactions.
A thorough examination of the chemistry and history of ten prominent prescription drugs.
This book covers over 320 classical as well as contemporary name reactions. Each reaction is delineated by its detailed step-by-step, electron-pushing mechanism and supplemented with references. This fifth edition adds 27 new name reactions.
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