The identification of drug targets in a given disease has been central
to pharmaceutical research from the latter half of the 20th century
right up to the modern genomics era. Human Drug Targets provides an
essential guide to one of the most important aspects of drug discovery -
the identification of suitable protein and RNA targets prior to the
creation of drug development candidates.
The first part of the book consists of introductory chapters that
provide the background to drug target discovery and highlight the way in
which these targets have been organised into online databases. It also
includes a user's guide to the list of entries that forms the bulk of
the book.
Since this is not designed to be a compendium of drugs, the emphasis
will be on the known (or speculated) biological role of the targets and
not on the issues associated with pharmaceutical development. The
objective is to provide just enough information to be informative and
prompt further searches, while keeping the amount of text for each of
the many entries to a minimum.
Human Drug Targets will prove invaluable to those drug discovery
professionals, in both industry and academia, who need to make some
sense of the bewildering array of online information sources on current
and potential human drug targets. As well as creating order out of a
complex target landscape, the book will act as an ideas generator for
potentially novel targets that might form the basis of future discovery
projects.