Challenges of Academic Drug Discovery in Cancer
Saturday April 04, 2020
11:00 am
-
1:00 pm
Eastern Time (ET)
Room 15 A
DCP
DDD
NEU
Chair :
Markos Leggas
University of Kentucky
Michelle Arkin
University of California, San Francisco
This symposium draws on the experiences of academic investigators to highlight their scientific efforts and challenges in academic drug discovery. Presentations feature diverse efforts with topics ranging from the development of new platforms for targeting 'undruggable' proteins, the discovery of cyclin-kinase specific 'degraders' as tools and pharmacological interventions in cancer, the identification and pharmacologic targeting of p97 as a novel cancer target, to the development of dual-kinase inhibitors as a polypharmacologic strategy for overcoming adaptive resistance to therapy in acute myeloid leukemia.
Speakers
Donna Huryn
- University of Pittsburgh
Discovery of P97 Modulators - An Emerging Cancer Target
Craig Thomas
- National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences (NCATS), NIH
Development of Dual RTK+IRAK Inhibitors as a Means to Overcome Adaptive Resistance in Multiple Cancer Settings
Markos Leggas
- University of Kentucky
Drugging the ‘Undruggable’ – ETS Transcription Factor Inhibitors
Michelle Arkin
- University of California, San Francisco
Tackling Challenging Drug Targets Using Fragment-Based Ligand Discovery