Answering those questions with rigor and creativity is not just a job for pharmacologists. It is the solemn responsibility of everyone involved in turning molecules into medicines. References available upon request. For further reading, consult "Goodman & Gilman's The Pharmacological Basis of Therapeutics" and the FDA's "Guidance for Industry: Clinical Pharmacology."
As the industry moves toward complex modalities—antibody-drug conjugates, RNA therapeutics, gene editing, and PROTACs—the principles of pharmacology remain unchanged. What is the target? How does the drug reach it? What does the body do to the drug? And most importantly, what is the therapeutic index in humans? pharmacology in drug discovery and development
This article dissects the multifaceted role of pharmacology across the entire value chain of drug creation, from target identification to post-marketing surveillance. Before a single compound is synthesized, pharmacology asks the most critical question: Is this target druggable? Defining the Biological Target Drug discovery begins with a disease hypothesis. Pharmacology steps in to validate the biological target—typically a receptor, enzyme, ion channel, or nucleic acid. Using tools like CRISPR-Cas9, RNA interference, and monoclonal antibodies, pharmacologists confirm that modulating this target will indeed produce a therapeutic effect. Answering those questions with rigor and creativity is
In the context of drug discovery and development, pharmacology serves two distinct but intertwined masters: —what the drug does to the body—and pharmacokinetics (PK) —what the body does to the drug. Without a deep understanding of both, a promising chemical compound is merely a molecule; pharmacology transforms it into a therapy. For further reading, consult "Goodman & Gilman's The
From measuring the affinity of a lead compound for its receptor using surface plasmon resonance, to interpreting a Phase III PK/PD analysis that saves the label from a “boxed warning,” pharmacology is the thread that weaves chemistry, biology, and clinical medicine into a coherent whole.
Introduction The journey from a molecular hypothesis to a marketed medicine is often described as a decade-long odyssey, costing upwards of $2.6 billion. At the heart of this complex, high-stakes endeavor lies a single, foundational discipline: pharmacology . Often misunderstood as merely the study of drug action, pharmacology is the rigorous scientific bridge that connects chemistry to clinical medicine.