In this article, the most downloaded of Q2 2011, Simon Teague outlines that the key determinants for success in drug discovery can be defined by studying recently launched drugs.
05 January 2012
Members' Content
In this article, the most downloaded of Q1 2011, Timothy J. Ritchie, Peter Ertl and Richard Lewis review various approaches that have been used to represent molecule properties graphically in the context of oral ‘drug likeness’, with the goal of improving the decision making of medicinal chemists during the drug discovery process.
05 January 2012
Members' Content
The most downloaded article from Drug Discovery Today in Q2 2010 was by Sheng-Yong Yang and deals with the application of pharmacophore modeling to drug discovery.
01 February 2011
This article, by Stephen J. Campbell, Anna Gaulton, Jason Marshall, Dmitri Bichko, Sid Martin, Cory Brouwer1 and Lee Harland was the most downloaded article of Q1 2010. It deals with tools to integrate biological, chemical and clinical resources.
01 February 2011
The content of the most downloaded article in Q4 2009 deals with the impact of the number of aromatic rings on the ability to deliver quality compounds for drug development. This information and analysis is clearly highly important and directly relevant to the day-to-day work of the medicinal chemist.
01 February 2011
Again, medicinal chemistry features highly in our "Most downloaded" spot. This time we feature the extremely hot topic of fragment-based drug discovery, from some of the most influential experts, based in the Netherlands and the UK
01 February 2011
This article was the most downloaded article in the period Q2 2009. A common theme appears with many of our most popular articles in that they frequently relate to medicinal chemistry strategy or practice. I hope that you enjoy this article.
01 February 2011
This article is involved with the impact that social networking is beginning to make on drug discovery process. While bioinformaticsand chemoinformatics underpin research at a scientific level, rapid communication between individual researchers across continents now allows the global exchange of ideas, tools and technologies.Networking at this level of speed and reach is quite a recent phenomenon. It facilitates the developmentof common interests, accelerates technology transfer and increases cooperative and competitive behaviour. The article critically evaluates different web-based networking approaches as effectivere sources for the drug discovery scientist.
14 January 2010
Welcome to the first article in Drug Discovery Today Citation Classics. I would say that it is very hard to predict what articles will make citation classic articles, but I suppose that having a Nobel Prize-winning author and a topic of great significance to the field of synthetic medicinal chemistry is a pretty good start.
10 August 2009