Structural alerts are commonly used in drug discovery to identify molecules likely to form reactive metabolites and thereby become toxic. Unfortunately, as useful as structural alerts are, they do not effectively model if, when, and why metabolism renders safe molecules toxic. Toxicity due to a specific structural alert is highly conditional, depending on the metabolism of the alert, the reactivity of its metabolites, dosage, and competing detoxification pathways. A systems approach, which explicitly models these pathways, could more effectively assess the toxicity risk of drug candidates. In this study, we demonstrated that mathematical models of P450 metabolism can predict the context-specific probability that a structural alert will be b...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
Metabolism of xenobiotics remains a central challenge for the discovery and development of drugs, co...
No Abstract.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50181/1/950020612_ftp.pd
In order to identify compounds with potential toxicity problems, particular attention is paid to str...
Toxicity testing of chemicals is currently undergoing its largest ever paradigm shift, moving toward...
Xenobiotic metabolism has become of paramount significance in drug research, development, and therap...
Cytochrome P450 enzymes aid in the elimination of a preponderance of small molecule drugs, but can g...
Xenobiotic metabolism has become of paramount significance in drug research, development, and therap...
Xenobiotic metabolism has become of paramount significance in drug research, development, and therap...
Reactive metabolites are widely accepted as playing a pivotal role in causing idiosyncratic adverse ...
Prédire à l’avance quels composés seront toxiques chez l’homme ou non représente un réel challenge d...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are a serious problem with increasing morbidity, mortality, and health...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
Metabolism of xenobiotics remains a central challenge for the discovery and development of drugs, co...
No Abstract.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50181/1/950020612_ftp.pd
In order to identify compounds with potential toxicity problems, particular attention is paid to str...
Toxicity testing of chemicals is currently undergoing its largest ever paradigm shift, moving toward...
Xenobiotic metabolism has become of paramount significance in drug research, development, and therap...
Cytochrome P450 enzymes aid in the elimination of a preponderance of small molecule drugs, but can g...
Xenobiotic metabolism has become of paramount significance in drug research, development, and therap...
Xenobiotic metabolism has become of paramount significance in drug research, development, and therap...
Reactive metabolites are widely accepted as playing a pivotal role in causing idiosyncratic adverse ...
Prédire à l’avance quels composés seront toxiques chez l’homme ou non représente un réel challenge d...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
Adverse drug reactions (ADRs) are a serious problem with increasing morbidity, mortality, and health...
The metabolism of xenobioticsand more specifically drugsin the liver is a critical process control...
Metabolism of xenobiotics remains a central challenge for the discovery and development of drugs, co...
No Abstract.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/50181/1/950020612_ftp.pd