Medicinal Chemistry and Natural Products

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The Division of Medicinal Chemistry and Natural Products focuses on finding new therapeutic agents and targets. Thousands of compounds researched by the School have the potential for therapeutic applications impacting many disease targets, such as enzymes, specific drug receptors, and even genetics.
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Medicinal Chemistry and Natural Products

The Division of Medicinal Chemistry and Natural Products focuses on finding new therapeutic agents and targets. Thousands of compounds researched by the School have the potential for therapeutic applications impacting many disease targets, such as enzymes, specific drug receptors, and even genetics.

Medicinal Chemistry is a dynamic, multifaceted scientific discipline dedicated to the improvement of human
health through research leading to new concepts for the design and development of therapeutic and diagnostic agents. At UNC-Chapel Hill, Medicinal Chemistry is a unique basic science that seamlessly blends the principles and experimental techniques of chemistry and biology with computational science aiding the discovery process. The focus of Medicinal Chemistry is on biology, which distinguishes it from traditional chemistry, and it uses chemical tools, which distinguishes it from traditional biology. The field also has deep connections with medicine and molecular pharmacology.

 While maintaining a traditional emphasis on the small molecule (drug candidate), we have integrated the contemporary biological methods to merge small molecule and target biomolecule research to allow for elucidation of disease pathways and mechanisms of drug action. Thus, our program encompasses drug discovery, target discovery and validation, and the use of computational sciences to help describe and predict drug function. This information serves as the basis for the development of new therapeutic agents. Current innovations are targeting the spread of cancer with enzymes, exploring the roots behind natural remedies to find new therapeutic agents, and studying proteins at the molecular level.

 The division has research strengths in:

  • Synthesis and structure-activity characterization of pharmaceutically relevant small molecules and natural products
  • Bioorganic and chemical biology studies of the properties of designed small-molecule ligands and their cognate drug targets, including proteins, nucleic acids, and glycoconjugates
  • Combinatorial biochemistry and proteomics for the identification of novel signaling pathways and drug targets
  • Structural biology and biomolecular dynamics of drug-protein interactions
  • Chemo- and bioinformatics
  • Molecular modeling

The division has been targeted for sustained growth, and recent developments in facilities, endowment and faculty additions make this an especially opportune time to join the division. The School’s facilities doubled with the dedication of Kerr Hall in October 2002. Currently, the division’s research space is being renovated and expanded, with 10,000 square feet undergoing complete renovation. Beginning in January 2008, the School will occupy an additional 75,000 square feet of state-of-the-art research space in the newly constructed Genetic Medicine Research Building, and the division will have a commitment of substantial space in the new facility. In January 2003, an alumnus established a $20 million endowment, the single largest private gift to any school of pharmacy, which will impact every effort at the School.

To find out more about the Divison of Medicinal Chemistry and Natural Products, please click on the links below: