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Drug Design Lab

Virtual Drug Design

Drug design refers to the inventive process of creating new compounds and medications based on our knowledge of a biological target. Often, this biological target is a protein that may be inhibited to provide a therapeutic effect. A detailed understanding of a protein’s structure and function is often required in the design of novel inhibitors. The Mahajan laboratory utilizes virtual, or computer-aided, drug design methods to model new compounds that are complementary to a target protein’s shape and charge. These virtually-designed lead-like compounds are then synthesized in collaboration with Stanford’s Medicinal Chemistry Knowledge Center (MCKC) for biochemical and cellular testing.

 

Drug Repositioning

The development of new drugs can cost upward of a billion dollars and take over a decade before the drug reaches the market. Drug repositioning makes use of existing drugs for the treatment of diseases where there are few therapeutic options. This approach can provide a safer alternative to the development of new compounds, since repurposed drugs are already FDA-approved, have proven bio-availabilities, and well-characterized side-effect profiles. To identify which drugs to reposition, our laboratory performs proteomic analyses of liquid biopsies (e.g. vitreous or aqueous humor) from diseased patients to identify drug targets and biomarkers. This approach allows for rapid, real-time repositioning of available drugs to patients with few therapeutic options. 

Projects

Structure-based drug design for inherited eye diseases.
Identifying available drugs to treat patients with rare diseases using proteomics.

News

Apr 4 2021 | Posted In: 20/20 Blog, Awards
Palo Alto, CA —Young Joo Sun Ph.D., postdoctoral fellow in the Mahajan Lab, received a grant from the Brightfocus Foundation to study a key protein involved in macular degeneration.
Jan 11 2021 | Posted In: 20/20 Blog
Palo Alto, CA — The Mahajan Lab is designing small-molecule injectable drugs for a number of molecular targets they identified using proteomics, the large-scale study of proteins
Jul 16 2020 | Posted In: 20/20 Blog
Apr 29 2020 | Posted In: 20/20 Blog
Palo Alto, CA — Traumatic brain injuries (TBI) can happen when someone is close to an explosion that sends out powerful shock waves through the air.

Publications

Ocular hypertension after intravitreal dexamethasone (Ozurdex) sustained-release implant, Chin, Eric K., Almeida David R. P., Velez Gabriel, Xu Kunyong, Peraire Maria, Corbella Maria, Elshatory Yasser M., Kwon Young H., Gehrs Karen M., H Boldt Culver, et al. , Retina, Volume 37, p.1345–1351, (2017)
Personalized proteomics in proliferative vitreoretinopathy implicate hematopoietic cell recruitment and mTOR as a therapeutic target, C Roybal, Nathaniel, Velez Gabriel, Toral Marcus A., Tsang Stephen H., Bassuk Alexander G., and Mahajan Vinit B. , American journal of ophthalmology, (2017)
Retinal and choroidal angiogenesis: a review of new targets, Cabral, Thiago, Mello Luiz Guilherme, Lima Luiz H., Polido Júlia, Regatieri Caio V., Belfort Rubens, and Mahajan Vinit B. , International journal of retina and vitreous, Volume 3, Number 1, p.31, (2017)