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      Book

      High Throughput Screening
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      Book

      High Throughput Screening

      DOI link for High Throughput Screening

      High Throughput Screening book

      The Discovery of Bioactive Substances

      High Throughput Screening

      DOI link for High Throughput Screening

      High Throughput Screening book

      The Discovery of Bioactive Substances
      Edited ByJohn P. Devlin
      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 1997
      eBook Published 21 April 2014
      Pub. Location Boca Raton
      Imprint CRC Press
      DOI https://doi.org/10.1201/9781482269802
      Pages 704
      eBook ISBN 9780429175152
      Subjects Bioscience
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      Devlin, J.P. (Ed.). (1997). High Throughput Screening: The Discovery of Bioactive Substances (1st ed.). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.1201/9781482269802

      ABSTRACT

      Furnishing the latest interdisciplinary information on the most important and frequently the only investigational system available for discovery programs that address the effects of small molecules on newly discovered enzyme and receptor targets emanating from molecular biology, this timely resource facilitates the transition from classical to high

      TABLE OF CONTENTS

      part |144 pages

      Natural Products as a Discovery Resource

      chapter 1|46 pages

      Chemical Diversity and Genetic Equity: Synthetic and Naturally Derived Compounds

      ByJohn P. Devlin

      chapter 2|28 pages

      Microcollection of Plants for Biochemical Profiling

      ByJohn P. Devlin

      chapter 3|22 pages

      Enzymes and Microbes as a Source of Chemical Diversity

      BySaul L. Neidleman

      chapter 4|46 pages

      The Marine Environment as a Discovery Resource

      ByGregg R. Dietzman

      part II|127 pages

      Compound Sourcing: Chemically Generated Screening Libraires

      chapter 5|8 pages

      Introduction

      ByMichael R. Pavia

      chapter 6|12 pages

      Rapidly Expanding Molecular Diversity: Libraries from Libraries

      ByJohn S. Kiely, Barbara Dörner, John M. Ostresh, Colette Dooley, Richard A. Houghten

      chapter 7|24 pages

      Synthesis of Encoded Small Molecule Combinatorial Libraries via ECLiPS

      ByJack J. Baldwin, Ian Henderson

      chapter 8|17 pages

      Parallel Organic Synthesis Using Parke-Davis' Diversomer® Method

      BySheila Hobbs DeWitt, Anthony W. Czarnik

      chapter 9|13 pages

      Rapid Discovery and Optimization of Biologically Active Small Molecules Using Automated Synthesis Methods

      ByAdnan M. M. Mjalli, Barry E. Toyonaga

      chapter 10|20 pages

      CMT: A Solution Phase Combinatorial Chemistry Approach: Synthesis and Yield Prediction of Phenazines

      ByFerenc Darvas, László Kovács

      chapter 11|8 pages

      Design of a Diverse Screening Library

      ByDavid E. Patterson, Allan M. Ferguson, Richard D. Cramer, Cheryl D. Garr, Ted L. Underiner, John R. Peterson

      chapter 12|11 pages

      Automating Combinatorial Chemistry: Challenges and Pitfalls

      ByJill H. Hardin, Frank R. Smietana

      chapter 13|9 pages

      Combi-chem High Throughput Screening for Leads Optimization

      ByRichard M. Kris, Patti Willson, Serene Josiah, Marianne Wildgoose, Helen Yeoman, Viktor Krchnak, Stephen Baum, Stephen Felder

      part III|182 pages

      Assay Technologies and Detection Methods

      chapter 14|4 pages

      Introduction

      ByAlfred J. Kolb

      chapter 15|27 pages

      Bioassay Design and Implementation

      ByRobert W. Wallace, Mark E. Goldman

      chapter 16|10 pages

      Scintillation Proximity Assays

      ByMartino Picardo, Kelvin T. Hughes

      chapter 17|12 pages

      FlashPlate™ Technology

      ByBeverly A. Brown, Margaret Cain, Jeff Broadbent, Sharon Tompkins, Georgette Henrich, Rich Joseph, Sally Casto, Harry Harney, Rick Greene, Ron Delmondo, Simon Ng

      chapter 18|15 pages

      Assays for Small Molecule Agonists and Antagonists of the Neurotrophin Receptors

      ByMaureen H. Beresini, Michael D. Sadick, Amy L. Galloway, Randy Yen, Sherry H. Yeh, Andy C. Chang, David L. Shelton, Wai Lee T. Wong

      chapter 19|16 pages

      Homogeneous, Time-Resolved Fluorescence Method for Drug Discovery

      ByAlfred J. Kolb, Jocelyn W. Burke, Gerard Mathis

      chapter 20|16 pages

      Time-Resolved Fluorometry: Advantages and Potentials

      ByIlkka Hemmilä

      chapter 21|12 pages

      Adaptation of Time-Resolved Fluorescence to Homogeneous Screening Formats

      ByJanet M. Kolb, Greg Yamanaka, Susan P. Manly

      chapter 22|11 pages

      Fluorescence Polarization

      ByJ. Richard Sportsman, Sandra K. Lee, Hara Dilley, Robert Bukar

      chapter 23|12 pages

      Reporter Gene Assay Applications

      ByWinfried Scheirer

      chapter 24|13 pages

      Development of a Gene Expression-Based Screen Using Quantitative Polymerase Chain Reaction

      ByD.K.H. Lee, E. T. Wilkinson, S. Cheifetz, S.A. De Grandis

      chapter 25|16 pages

      High-Performance Microphysiometry in Drug Discovery

      ByM. Liisa Alajoki, Gregory T. Baxter, William R. Bemiss, David Blau, Luc J. Bousse, Samuel D.H. Chan, Timothy D. Dawes, Karen M. Hahnenberger, James M. Hamilton, Philip Lam, Richard J. McReynolds, Douglas N. Modlin, John C. Owicki, J. Wallace Parce, Dana Redington, Knute Stevenson, H. Garrett Wada, Jana Williams

      chapter 26|12 pages

      Bio-analytical Applications of BIAcore, an Optical Biosensor

      ByFrancois Legay, Albientz Patrick, Rüdiger Ridder

      part IV|91 pages

      Automation and Robotics

      chapter 27|3 pages

      Introduction

      ByAlfred J. Kolb

      chapter 28|10 pages

      Management and Service Issues of a Centralized Robotic HTS Core

      ByJohn Babiak

      chapter 29|11 pages

      Flexible use of People and Machines

      ByMark Beggs, John S. Major

      chapter 30|9 pages

      Bar-Code Technology and a Centralized Database: Key Components in a Radioligand Binding Program

      ByElizabeth A. Kunysz, Melissa Lukes, Douglas W. Bonhaus

      chapter 31|16 pages

      Factors for the Successful Integration of Assays, Equipment, Robotics, and Software

      ByDejan Bojanic, Wilma W. Keighley, Mike J. Russell, Terry P. Wood

      chapter 32|15 pages

      Accelerating the Discovery Process with Automation and Robotics: A Sure Bet or a Risky Venture?

      ByRichard K. Brown, Andree Proulx

      chapter 33|21 pages

      Perspectives on Scheduling

      ByAlain Donzel, Jorge Carmona, L. Andrew Corkan

      part V|75 pages

      Data Retrieval, Handling and Integration

      chapter 34|2 pages

      Introduction

      ByJohn P. Devlin

      chapter 35|31 pages

      Database Systems

      ByBarr E. Bauer

      chapter 36|15 pages

      Systems Integration

      ByChip Allee

      chapter 37|23 pages

      Data Management and Tracking for Natural Product Programs

      ByGregg R. Dietzman

      part IV|46 pages

      Laboratory Design and Management

      chapter 38|1 pages

      Introduction

      ByMatthew A. Sills

      chapter 39|26 pages

      Planning and Implementing an HTS Program

      ByMatthew A. Sills, Mark Crawford

      chapter 40|16 pages

      Establishing an HTS Program in a Start-Up Biotechnology Company

      ByMichael D. Boisclair, James Schultz, Dan Maloney
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