Neeta RatanghayraMay 27, 2020
Tag: drug discovery , target-based drug discovery , phenotypic screening
With advancements in biomedical science, drug discovery has evolved different strategies. However, with this dramatic progress, concerns have emerged regarding the efficiency of translating these technical advances into safe and efficacious new drugs.
The two main strategies for advanced drug discovery are target-based and phenotypic screening strategies. While the target-based approach starts with a hypothesis related to the disease, the phenotypic strategy is the molecular approach, in which genetics and molecular sciences identify a molecular hypothesis.
Phenotypic Drug Discovery – The Unbiased Approach
Phenotypic screening strategies involve assays that measure a clinically meaningful phenotype in a physiologically relevant system such as an animal or cell. Phenotypic screening strategies do not require a prior understanding of the molecular mechanism of action, and drug identification follows an unbiased approach.
The phenotypic screening approach is also called ‘forward pharmacology,’ as the molecular mechanism and protein target can remain unknown even after the drug’s activity and efficacy are determined. A well-known example of a drug discovered by phenotypic screening is aspirin, whose mechanism of action was found almost 100 years after its discovery.
Value of phenotypic screening to drug discovery
The phenotypic screen is usually more physiologically relevant and less artificial because intact cells and native cellular environments are used. In phenotypic screening, a disease characteristic is exploited to develop a cell-based assay. Compounds are then screened in the assay to identify active lead compounds that ameliorate the disease phenotype.
Primary hits identified in the phenotypic screens can target enzymes, receptors, transcription factors, and even different signaling pathways. Lead compounds can be further selected from the hits with or without knowledge of the target. However, identification of the target can facilitate the structure-activity relationship (SAR) study to decode the relationship between the chemical structure of a molecule and its biological activity.
Phenotypic screening enables drug discovery to proceed with incomplete information – the approach allows for identifications of first-in-class medicines and their respective molecular mechanisms of action or ‘pharmacological hot spots.’ The phenotypic screen enables lead discovery for many diseases in which a drug target has not been identified and validated, for example, rare diseases.
Target-based drug discovery – Hypothesis-driven
Target-based approach for drug discovery, also called ‘reverse pharmacology,’ generally starts with target identification of a disease of interest. Increased understanding of the molecular basis of a disease has expanded the utility of a target-based approach. The molecular targets are often discovered in basic research, with studies involving animal disease models and clinical observations of patient phenotypes.
Target-based approaches are often simpler to execute than phenotypic methods, operating with knowledge of a drug’s molecular mechanisms from an earlier stage. Target-based approaches have dominated the pharma industry because of its efficiency, cost economy, and massive throughput.
Target-based drug discovery affects only “the target,” i.e., one gene or molecular mechanism to selectively treat the deficit that causes the disease without producing side effects. The basic steps involved in a target-based drug discovery are depicted in the infographic below:
Human genetics - One of the most powerful tools in the identification of drug targets
The discovery of the genetic basis of a disease provides hope that a drug targeting that particular gene or the protein produced by the gene has an excellent probability of succeeding. Certain molecular targets, such as protein kinase, have been particularly amenable to a target-based approach. Target-based approach has enabled the development of several drugs acting on kinases, particularly in cancer therapy. G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest family of proteins kinases targeted by around 35% of approved drugs.
Target-based approaches may not be suitable for all disease
Though the target-based approach forms an effective way to discover new treatments target, the cumbersome process of target validation makes the entire approach filled with uncertainty.
The biggest roadblock with target-based approaches is that projects and compounds can fail to translate into clinical results. Targets maneuvered into simple cell-based assays will not always behave the same as in the complex biological environment; even findings from gene engineering in model species may not translate to patients.
Another loophole with target-based drug discovery is that the approach can fail to capture the whole story. Most diseases are caused by a combination of several genetic and environmental factors – hence, simultaneous modulation of multiple molecular targets/pathways is pivotal for successful treatment. In some instances, the drugs may take action at more than one target, and the drug efficacy may not always be due to the mechanisms expected initially; due to this, drugs can produce surprising pharmacology not anticipated originally, such as the clinical response to sildenafil in erectile dysfunction rather than cardiovascular disease.
The resurgence of interest in phenotypic screening
The pharmaceutical industry and medical health supplies are gradually moving towards phenotypic screening beyond individual genes/targets. When a prevailing drug target hypothesis proves fruitless, a fresh approach using phenotypic drug discovery may be warranted.
A new paradigm of phenotypic drug discovery combines physiologically and disease-relevant biological substrates with sufficient throughput, operational simplicity, and statistical vigor. Next-Generation phenotypic screening utilizing transcript quantification, public databases (such as chemical and bioactivity profiles, ontologies, image-based screening results), combined with machine-learning tools, are providing novel screening strategies by augmenting phenotypic screening results.
Uniting Phenotypic and Target-Based Drug Discovery
Phenotypic drug discovery can complement target-based programs, and this can certainly cause a paradigm shift and open up new opportunities. There is an overlap between the approaches but also differences that provide opportunities for innovation—combining the best of both approaches when possible can provide both efficient identifications of safe and efficacious new drugs and aid their successful translation into clinical success.
References
Zheng W, Thorne N, McKew JC. Phenotypic screens as a renewed approach for drug discovery. Drug Discov Today. 2013;18(21-22):1067‐1073.
Croston GE. The utility of target-based discovery. Expert Opin Drug Discov. 2017;12(5):427-429.
Sams-Dodd F. Target-based drug discovery: is something wrong? Drug Discov Today. 2005;10(2):139-147.
Vane JR, Botting RM. The mechanism of action of aspirin. Thromb Res. 2003;110(5-6):255‐258.
Hughes JP, Rees S, Kalindjian SB, et al. Principles of early drug discovery. Br J Pharmacol. 2011;162(6):1239‐1249.
Aulner N, Danckaert A, Ihm J, et al. Next-Generation Phenotypic Screening in Early Drug Discovery for Infectious Diseases. Trends Parasitol. 2019;35(7):559‐570.
About the Author:
Neeta Ratanghayra is a freelance medical writer, who creates quality medical content for Pharma and healthcare industries. A Master’s degree in Pharmacy and a strong passion for writing made her venture into the world of medical writing. She believes that effective content forms the media through which innovations and developments in pharma/healthcare can be communicated to the world."
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