Data on drugs and small molecules is placed in the public domain, helping
the discovery and development of new medicines
Press
Release 23 July 2008 [PDF]
The Wellcome Trust has awarded £4.7
million [€5.8 million] to EMBL's European Bioinformatics
Institute [EMBL-EBI] to support the transfer of a large collection
of information on the properties and activities of drugs and a large
set of drug-like small molecules from the publicly listed company
Galapagos NV to the public domain. It will be incorporated into
the EMBL-EBI's collection of open-access data resources for biomedical
research and will be maintained by a newly established
team of scientists at the EMBL-EBI. These data lie at the heart of
translating information from the human genome into successful
new drugs in the clinic.
The human genome sequence provided a molecular 'parts list' for
a human being, comprising all the genes and proteins that are
encoded by our genetic blueprint. But to develop new medicines,
it is important to catalogue how each of these 'parts' interacts with
drugs and drug-like molecules. This interface of the genome with
chemistry is a core part of the new scientific area of chemogenomics.
For the past eight years, researchers at BioFocus DPI,
the service division of Galapagos, have been integrating the existing
collections of information in these two areas to develop a set
of well-structured chemogenomic databases that can be used to
help determine whether a particular molecule has the right properties
to make an effective drug. BioFocus DPI licensed this information
to pharmaceutical and biotech companies worldwide. As
part of the Wellcome Trust grant announced today, the EBI will
obtain the rights to the databases from BioFocus DPI. The award
will make it possible to provide free access to this information for
all researchers. "The scientific community worldwide will greatly
benefit from unrestricted access to these data. It will aid their
efforts in predictive drug discovery," says Galapagos CEO Onno
van de Stolpe. "Galapagos has successfully accelerated its research
programmes with these, and BioFocus DPI used the data to deliver
on its contracts with customers. After this transfer, which we hope
will contribute to the advancement of drug discovery research by
improving access to the data that we have collected, we will continue
to use these resources."
The transfer will empower academia to participate in the first
stages of drug discovery for all therapeutic areas, including major
diseases of the developing world. In future it could also result in
improved prediction of drug side-effects. "We are excited to be
able to provide information that defines the effects of a large number
of small molecules on the body, and link this to the proteins
that these molecules interact with, as part of our mission to provide
wide access to bioinformatics tools to promote scientific
progress and disseminate cutting-edge technologies to industry,"
says EMBL-EBI Director Janet Thornton. "With this transfer, we
aim to facilitate faster and better drug discovery. It speaks to the
importance of this information for translational research that the
Wellcome Trust has chosen to support this particular transfer
with sufficient long-term funding."
This unprecedented transfer of pharmaceutical data resources
from the private sector to the public domain will have the greatest
impact on researchers in academia and in small companies on
limited budgets. "The Wellcome Trust has a strong commitment
to making vital research tools freely available to the academic
research community," says Dr. Alan Schafer, Head of Molecular
and Physiological Sciences at the Wellcome Trust." Enabling these
previously proprietary data to enter the public domain will allow
researchers worldwide to make free use of knowledge essential for
drug discovery."
Press Contact
Louisa Wright PhD
EMBL-EBI Scientific Outreach Officer
Hinxton, UK
Tel: +44 1223 494665
Email: louisa@ebi.ac.uk, contactpress@ebi.ac.uk
Anna-Lynn Wegener
Press Officer
EMBL Heidelberg, Germany
Tel: +49 6221 387-8452
Email: wegener@embl.de
Craig Brierley
Media Officer
Wellcome Trust
London, UK
Tel: +44 20 7611 8866
Email: media.office@wellcome.ac.uk
www.wellcome.ac.uk
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