posted on 2024-07-22, 19:37authored byXin Hu, Paul Shinn, Zina Itkin, Lin Ye, Ya-Qin Zhang, Min Shen, Stephanie Ford-Scheimer, Matthew D. Hall
As part of the NIH Helping to End Addiction Long-term
(HEAL) Initiative,
the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences is dedicated
to the development of new pharmacological tools and investigational
drugs for managing and treating pain as well as the prevention and
treatment of opioid misuse and addiction. In line with these objectives,
we created a comprehensive, annotated small molecule library including
drugs, probes, and tool compounds that act on published pain- and
addiction-relevant targets. Nearly 3000 small molecules associated
with approximately 200 known and hypothesized HEAL targets have been
assembled, curated, and annotated in one collection. Physical samples
of the library compounds have been acquired and plated in 1536-well
format, enabling a rapid and efficient high-throughput screen against
a wide range of assays. The creation of the HEAL Targets and Compounds
Library, coupled with an integrated computational platform for AI-driven
machine learning, structural modeling, and virtual screening, provides
a valuable source for strategic drug repurposing, innovative profiling,
and hypothesis testing of novel targets related to pain and opioid
use disorder (OUD). The library is available to investigators for
screening pain and OUD-relevant phenotypes.