Puneet Varma (Editor)

Systems pharmacology

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Systems pharmacology wwwnaturecomnrdjournalv4n12imagesnrd1904f

Matthias machacek systems pharmacology with small data


Systems pharmacology (drug network) is the application of systems biology principles to the field of pharmacology. It seeks to understand how medicines work on various systems of the body. Instead of considering the effect of a drug to be the result of one specific drug-protein interaction, systems pharmacology considers the effect of a drug to be the outcome of the network of interactions a drug may have. In 1992, the article on systems medicine and pharmacology by B.J. Zeng was published in China, at the National Conference on Chinese and Western Medicine. Networks of interaction may include chemical-protein, protein–protein, genetic, signalling and physiological (at cellular, tissue, organ and whole body levels). Systems pharmacology uses bioinformatics and statistics techniques to integrate and interpret these networks.

Contents

Systems pharmacology Multiscale analyses in systems pharmacology The top h Openi

Mini-review of network-based prediction of novel drug targets.

Systems pharmacology can be applied to drug safety studies as a complement to pharmacoepidemiology. The EU-ADR has successfully incorporated systems pharmacology into their signal substantiation pipeline.

Systems pharmacology Towards Systems Pharmacology

Quantitative and systems pharmacology approaches for the development of oncology drugs


Systems pharmacology CancerHSP anticancer herbs database of systems pharmacology


Systems pharmacology Systems Pharmacology

Systems pharmacology The Lee Lab

References

Systems pharmacology Wikipedia


Similar Topics