
iPIDD director Charles McKenna
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Teaming Up for Drug DiscoveryNew program links chemists and pharmaceutical scientists
By Eva Emerson
November 2004
Traditionally, the development of new drug therapies followed a linear
course, with little interaction between the chemists who created new
compounds, pharmacologists who studied the activity of the compounds in
living systems, and physicians who evaluated the most promising drug
candidates in clinical trials.
But as the drug discovery process has grown more sophisticated, the
field has increasingly become a more interdisciplinary and
collaborative endeavor.
In response, the USC College of Letters, Arts & Sciences and the
USC School of Pharmacy have launched the Interdisciplinary Program in
Drug Discovery (iPIDD), a new program designed to strengthen graduate
student training.
By providing increased opportunity for interaction among chemists and
pharmacologists, iPIDD will better prepare graduate students for
working within the interdisciplinary model of drug discovery that is
quickly becoming the norm in both industry and academia, says Joseph
Aoun, dean of USC College and holder of the Anna H. Bing Deans Chair.
Critically, the new program also supports our aim to tightly link
research and training in fundamental fields like chemistry with related
efforts in the applied sciences.
The program, which will enroll its first class of students in fall
2005, will bring together faculty and students in the chemistry
department with those in the department of pharmaceutical sciences.
Students want this kind of interdisciplinary training, they want this
kind of broad exposure, says program director Charles McKenna,
professor of chemistry and pharmaceutical sciences. Working in an
integrated pharmaceutical company, they will need to know more than
just how to synthesize compounds. They will need to be able to talk
with the pharmacologists and biologists.
McKennas own work developing anti-viral and other drugs has benefited
from his many collaborations with USC pharmaceutical scientists.
Tom Upton is the kind of student iPIDD has been designed to attract.
Upton has informally pursued chances to take courses and get to know
students and faculty in the pharmacy school. My grandfather died of
brain cancer, and that has been a motivating factor for me. I have
aspirations of developing a cure for brain cancer some day, Upton
says. So, I had a clear purpose in coming to graduate schoolI want to
go into the pharmaceutical industry.
Upton is one of six chemistry doctoral students already benefiting from
the new program. This fall, Upton and his peers at University Park are
taking Drug Design and Discovery, an interdisciplinary, team-taught
course offered by the pharmacy school. They are able to actively
participate in the class, held seven miles away on the Health Sciences
Campus, via a relatively low-cost, Web-based videoconferencing
technology that McKenna set up for iPIDD.
What we want to do is give chemistry students who are synthesizing
drugs some exposure to how you look at the behavior of a drug in the
body, and where it goes once it is in the body. When administered
orally, how well does it make it into the bloodstream? Those are
questions that must be addressed if a compound is eventually to have
potential as an actual drug for the clinic, McKenna says.
Access to advanced chemistry courses will provide pharmacy graduate
students with a more sophisticated understanding of drugs as molecules
ruled by chemical principles.
What were trying to do [through iPIDD] is remove
barriersadministrative, geographical and othersto make it easier for
students to learn across disciplines, McKenna says.
Ian Haworth, associate professor of pharmaceutical sciences, will be
the co-director of iPIDD. Weve been doing this informally for years,
but formalizing it will enable more students to take part and help us
tap the full potential of both departments. Theres a real need for
this, says Haworth.
Thinking about career options before they even start graduate school is
a trend that has driven student interest in iPIDD, says Sarah
Hamm-Alvarez, the Gavin S. Herbert Associate Professor of Pharmaceutical
Sciences and a member of the programs steering committee. I think
students are more concerned with getting a job after they graduate, and
many employers [in science] are asking for more interdisciplinary
experience. Some are demanding it, she says.
Support from the deans and the work of department chairs Hanna Reisler
of chemistry and Wei-Chiang Shen of pharmaceutical sciences, as well as
co-director Haworth, and steering committee members Hamm-Alvarez and
Amy Barrios, assistant professor of chemistry, have been crucial in
making iPIDD a reality. In the future, McKenna looks forward to
increasing participation by faculty from both the College and Pharmacy.
Drug discovery is a focal point of the School of Pharmacys research
and graduate education programs, says Timothy M. Chan, dean of the
School of Pharmacy. I am delighted in this joint effort with the
department of chemistry because it provides us with a unique
opportunity to synergize the development of a new direction for
graduate education.
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