91ÑÇÉ«´«Ã½

Award

Shoichet recognized for informatics tools for drug discovery

He won the 91ÑÇÉ«´«Ã½'s DeLano Award for Computational Biosciences
Dawn Hayward
April 1, 2017

, a professor of pharmaceutical chemistry at the University of California, San Francisco, won the . Shoichet works on the development of docking methods and screening libraries and applies these tools in particular to G-protein–coupled receptors.

Brian Shoichet
“My reaction to getting the award was excitement to have the work of the lab recognized, and melancholy remembering Warren Delano and his contributions. He came out of UCSF’s graduate program and made important scientific contributions as well as his contributions to open science. He was an ever more central member of our community at the time of his untimely death.”
– Brian Shoichet

The Shoichet lab seeks to improve on traditional docking methods with new tricks of the trade. His lab has generated several distinct binding pockets that mimic typical protein cavities with which a promising small molecule could dock. This allows even failed predictions to help in the search for targets that match each small molecule tested.

In addition, the Shoichet lab works with libraries containing millions of small molecules, looking to enhance these libraries with the addition of bio-relevant molecules. This elevates molecular docking projects to the level of traditional high-throughput screening methods.

A key test of these methods has been on GPCRs. The Shoichet lab, in collaboration with of the University of North Carolina, has characterized several orphan GPCRs, including GPR68. This work utilized another aspect of Shoichet’s toolbox, the chemical probe, which identified GRP68’s role in fear-based learning.

In his letter nominating Shoichet, UCSF colleague wrote, “Brian is distinct in that he has extended the reach of computational modeling to study protein-ligand interactions with enormous impact on drug discovery and enzymology.”

As the DeLano Award celebrates the development and dissemination of computational tools, of the University of Dundee noted in his letter of support for Shoichet’s nomination that Shoichet indeed fits the bill. “In the spirit of the 91ÑÇÉ«´«Ã½ DeLano Award, Professor Shoichet has made multiple informatics platforms of his research readily accessible to the scientific community to accelerate their own research,” he wrote.

Shoichet earned his bachelor’s degree in chemistry from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and his Ph.D. in medicinal chemistry from UCSF. After postdoctoral fellowships at UCSF and the University of Oregon, Shoichet held a faculty position at Northwestern University before being recruited back to UCSF.

Shoichet won the PhRMA Foundation Career Award and the National Science Foundation Career Award. He also has served on the scientific advisory board for the National Institutes of Health RoadMap Chemical Libraries and Screening Initiative and the NIH Centers for Biomedical Computing.

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Dawn Hayward

Dawn Hayward earned a Ph.D. in biochemistry from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine

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