This is Jeremy Smith's blog about life in Tennessee, local science and other topics of interest. Is not endorsed by and does not, of course, represent the opinion of UT, ORNL or any other official entity.
Showing posts with label drug discovery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drug discovery. Show all posts
Friday, February 5, 2016
Patent Pending
Recent discussions we have had about intellectual property in inhibitor design highlight how artificial it all is. One needs "composition of matter", it seems, i.e., a new molecule. One cannot patent a new use for an old molecule as easily - it seems to be not worth it for investors. One cannot patent a molecule that has been published. Etc etc.
One wonders, then, what patents are really for. Are they to give due financial reward for creative people who make new, useful things or processes? If so, a lot of people deserve the rewards.
Assume someone designs a drug using molecular dynamics.
Who should get the credit?
Here's a very partial list.
a) Isaac Newton, Erwin Schroedinger etc, who laid the foundations.
b) Everyone who contributed to the simulation methodology.
c) The computer manufacturers and sys admins etc.
d) The team who did the simulations.
e) The experimental team who tested the compounds that failed and those that succeeded.
f) Everyone in decades gone by who devised the experimental methods for e)
g) All the preclinical researchers who optimized the lead.
h) The clinical trial patients and doctors etc.
i) The drug company that makes and distributes the drug.
j) Everyone who taught everyone to do a)-j)
etc.
That's a whole lotta folks; some dead, some alive. Those still alive should share the profits somehow. That would be ideal. Unworkable, surely, but ideal, I think.
Labels:
drug discovery,
IP,
Newton,
patents,
Schroedinger
Friday, October 1, 2010
Drug Discovery Research at Oak Ridge

Well, I've been involved to some extent in human health research for a while, including participating in research suggesting a common pharmacophoric footprint for AIDS vaccine design and in helping design experimental methods for detecting single tumour marker molecules in serum.
Now we appear to be on the road to working with Milton Brown and his colleagues at Georgetown University in prostate cancer research, as part of a new NIH Clinical and Translational Science Award center. Milton heads the Drug Discovery Center at Georgetown Medical School. The idea here is to use Oak Ridge's supercomputers to help design molecules of potential therapeutic use. Jerome Baudry will play a leading role in this research from our side. I'm kind of excited about what might happen.....
Labels:
drug discovery,
ORNL,
prostate cancer,
supercomputing
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