Medicinal chemistry (or drug discovery more generally) is hard. Some guidance for making it possible.
Most in the medchem community know Mark Murcko, who has established himself as a successful drug hunter in multiple contexts over a lengthy, yet still ongoing, career. In a somewhat unusual Perspective article in the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, Mark expounds upon the attributes that he’s observed associated with successful medicinal chemists over the course of his career. Beyond generalities and platitudes, Mark offers some excellent guidance for scientists of all disciplines along with some further reflections on attributes more specific to medicinal chemistry. Drug discovery is difficult, but it can be done well.Contributed by: Jim Audia
General characteristics of great scientists
Intellectually curious and constantly learning
Tightly focused on important problems
Pragmatic
Obsessed with data
Sweat the details
Sense of urgency
Recognize great science happens everywhere
Savvy about and open to new technologies
Challenge assumptions
Passionate about their work
Aware of their own ignorance; they “know what they don’t know”
Resilient
Good communicators
Often have a very high emotional intelligence
Often selfless “unsung heroes”
Seek out mentors, and become mentors
Discipline-specific characteristics of medicinal chemists
Always thinking about the target product profile
Creative drug designers
Manage the properties of their compounds
Think in three dimensions
Always want another scaffold
Don’t panic over IP
Don’t give up on validated targets
Care deeply about biology
Always have a good idea of what to make next
Aren’t afraid of tough syntheses
Avoid unnecessary complexity
Re-use whatever they can
Know the history of drug discovery
Citation:
What Makes A Great Medicinal Chemist? A Personal Perspective. Murcko MA. J. Med. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript, DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.7b01445, Publication Date (Web): 10 May 2018. (pubs.acs.org)