<div><p>An <i>in silico</i> chemical genomics approach is developed to predict drug repositioning (DR) candidates for three types of cancer: glioblastoma, lung cancer, and breast cancer. It is based on a recent large-scale dataset of ~20,000 drug-induced expression profiles in multiple cancer cell lines, which provides i) a global impact of transcriptional perturbation of both known targets and unknown off-targets, and ii) rich information on drug’s mode-of-action. First, the drug-induced expression profile is shown more effective than other information, such as the drug structure or known target, using multiple HTS datasets as unbiased benchmarks. Particularly, the utility of our method was robustly demonstrated in identifying novel DR can...
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive type of breast cancer which presents a h...
Existing computational methods for drug repositioning either rely only on the gene expression respon...
Existing computational methods for drug repositioning either rely only on the gene expression respon...
We present a novel strategy to identify drug-repositioning opportunities. The starting point of our ...
<div><p>We present a novel strategy to identify drug-repositioning opportunities. The starting point...
Repositioning existing drugs for new therapeutic uses is an efficient approach to drug discovery. Ho...
Abstract Developing new drugs continues to be a highly inefficient and costly business. By repurposi...
Repositioning existing drugs for new therapeutic uses is an efficient approach to drug discovery. Ho...
Drug repositioning aims to discover novel clinical benefits of existing drugs, is an effective way t...
Drug repositioning offers new clinical indications for old drugs. Recently, many computational appro...
Mutations in transcription factor (TF) genes are frequently observed in tumors, often leading to abe...
Drug repositioning is a powerful method that can assists the conventional drug discovery process by ...
Drug repositioning is a powerful method that can assists the conventional drug discovery process by ...
The high cost and the long time required to bring drugs into commerce is driving efforts to repurpos...
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive type of breast cancer which presents a h...
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive type of breast cancer which presents a h...
Existing computational methods for drug repositioning either rely only on the gene expression respon...
Existing computational methods for drug repositioning either rely only on the gene expression respon...
We present a novel strategy to identify drug-repositioning opportunities. The starting point of our ...
<div><p>We present a novel strategy to identify drug-repositioning opportunities. The starting point...
Repositioning existing drugs for new therapeutic uses is an efficient approach to drug discovery. Ho...
Abstract Developing new drugs continues to be a highly inefficient and costly business. By repurposi...
Repositioning existing drugs for new therapeutic uses is an efficient approach to drug discovery. Ho...
Drug repositioning aims to discover novel clinical benefits of existing drugs, is an effective way t...
Drug repositioning offers new clinical indications for old drugs. Recently, many computational appro...
Mutations in transcription factor (TF) genes are frequently observed in tumors, often leading to abe...
Drug repositioning is a powerful method that can assists the conventional drug discovery process by ...
Drug repositioning is a powerful method that can assists the conventional drug discovery process by ...
The high cost and the long time required to bring drugs into commerce is driving efforts to repurpos...
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive type of breast cancer which presents a h...
Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is the most aggressive type of breast cancer which presents a h...
Existing computational methods for drug repositioning either rely only on the gene expression respon...
Existing computational methods for drug repositioning either rely only on the gene expression respon...