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CSIR launches Open Source Drug Discovery
A Path-Breaking Research of the People, by the People,
for the People
The Council of Scientific
and Industrial Research (CSIR) has launched an innovative
Open Source Drug Discovery (OSDD) programme to
combat the scourge of infectious diseases that afflict the
developing world. OSDD is a CSIR led consortium with global
partnership. Its vision is to provide affordable healthcare
to all and especially to the weaker sections of global populations.
Addressing a press conference in New Delhi, Union Minister
for Science & Technology and Earth Sciences, Shri Kapil
Sibal said that though the Open Source approach has been successfully
adopted in software as also in the Human Genome Sequencing
Project, it is for the first time that open source approach
is being applied to drug discovery anywhere in the world.
Explaining the concept to the media, Prof. Samir K. Brahmachari,
DG, CSIR termed the OSDD as a novel and path-breaking initiative.
Market forces and business acumen discourage big pharmaceutical
companies from developing drugs for infectious diseases like
Tuberculosis (TB), malaria, etc since such projects have long
gestation period, heavy R&D costs and low success rate.
Even when successful, the returns are low since these diseases
generally afflict the poorer sections of the society. Thus,
it would be naïve to expect drug discovery for infectious
diseases to become a lucrative standard business model.
The Open source model, on the other hand, represents a viable
alternate model of drug discovery for infectious diseases.
It has two defining features.
- Expansion of resources by allowing open access and,
- Incentives to contribute to the co-operative effort.
In order to expand the intellectual resource and enable collaborative
drug discovery, CSIR has set up a web portal http://www.osdd.net.
This portal provides data on the pathogens, tools for data
analysis, and discussion forum for members to share ideas,
projects for students to participate in drug discovery, etc.
CSIR has given a clarion call to all ignited minds, be they
students, researchers, scientists, academicians, doctors,
software professionals, traditional healers or industry experts
to join the battle against infectious diseases by registering
at the OSDD website and sharing their ideas.
The website is based on the Wiki (Hawaiian word for "fast")
model designed to enable anyone to contribute or modify content
in a collaborative mode. These ideas and suggestions will
be peer- reviewed and the contributor commensurately acknowledged.
OSDD thus rests on three cardinal principles of Collaboration,
Sharing & Discovering. It aims to bring openness and collaborative
spirit to the drug discovery process with the objective of
keeping drug cost low.
Until recently, drug discovery was a wet science
if scientists wanted to identify potentially therapeutic
chemicals, they had to do experiments in test tubes, and use
live cultures or animals. Developments in bioinformatics have
enabled researchers to do drug discovery in silico
that is, by sitting in front of their computers or
in dry labs. Researchers can compare, on computers,
potential disease targets against large chemical databases
to identify potential drugs. The Internet encourages synergizing
of the inventive spirit of a large number of researchers by
uniting them in a collaborative mode for drug discovery. The
laboratory experiments during this process will be carried
at CSIR sponsored labs.
In the OSDD programme, a core committee of expert scientists
monitors the entire process of drug discovery closely. The
discovery of new potential- drugs will be in public domain
thus precluding monopoly. The potential drugs will be made
generic as soon as they are discovered. This will enable pharmaceutical
companies to bring the medicines to the market, and yet keep
drug prices competitive.
In the first phase, drugs against Tuberculosis (TB) bacillus
(Mycobacterium tuberculosis), will be undertaken. This includes
drugs against both drug resistant and latent tuberculosis
Why Tuberculosis as the first disease
target?
TB is the leading cause of death from bacterial infection.
WHO reports that one-third of the world's population is currently
infected with TB. The estimated incidence of TB in India is
1.8 million new cases annually. An estimated 370,000 deaths
due to TB occur each year. This amounts to over 1,000 deaths
a day, or 2 TB deaths every 3 minutes. The current TB therapy
was developed in the 1960s; and no major advancement
in treatment has emerged for almost half a century. Of the
1,556 new chemical entities marketed worldwide, between 1975
and 2004, only three were for TB. The presently used drugs,
with standard therapeutic duration of 6-9 months, - Isoniazid,
Rifampicin, Pyrazinamide and Ethambutol-- require careful
monitoring if drug resistance is to be avoided. The Multidrug-resistant
(MDR) TB takes longer to treat with second-line drugs, which
are more expensive and have stronger side-effects. Extensively
drug-resistant (XDR)-TB can develop when these second-line
drugs are misused or mismanaged and available therapy therefore
also become ineffective. Because XDR-TB is resistant to first-
and second-line drugs, treatment options are seriously limited.
Timelines
The overall project has been sectioned into work packages,
which can be broadly categorized into two phases. In Phase
I (2008-2012) new chemical entities are expected to be discovered.
These will be taken for preclinical and clinical trials in
Phase II (2012-2017).
Incentives
To encourage students and researchers to participate, problems
encountered in drug discovery process will be posted as Challenges
on the OSDD website. Each problem will have a pre-determined
set of credit points associated to it. The best solutions,
as decided by the core committee, will be commensurately awarded.
The registered participants will be provided with colour coded
membership cards. Users can upgrade the card (change colour)
by providing more quality-inputs. CSIR is exploring the possibility
of tying up with banks to add incentive features to the cards
issued to OSDD members. Students may also enroll online for
summer projects of their choice from the list of projects
hosted on the web portal. The progress of the each project
will be assessed by their online project mentors. Students
would also be awarded certificates to acknowledge their contributions.
Funding
In the Eleventh Plan Rs. 500 crore has been earmarked for
OSDD. The Government of India has already sanctioned Rs. 150
crore (US $38 million). An equivalent amount of funding would
be raised from international agencies and philanthropists.
About 46 crore (US $12 million) has been already released
by the Government of India.
Partners
In this largest ever collaborative research project on drug
discovery several institutions in India including Universities,
research institutes, private sector and others are participating.
Global Research Alliance which comprises of governmental/non-profit
organizations around the world is supporting OSDD.
CSIR:
- Institute of Genomics and Integrative Biology (IGIB),
Delhi
- Institute of Microbial Technology (IMT), Chandigarh
- National Chemical Laboratory (NCL), Pune
- Indian Institute of Chemical Technology (IICT), Hyderabad
- Center for Cellular and Molecular Biology (CCMB), Hyderabad
- Central Drug Research Institute (CDRI), Lucknow
- Indian Institute of Integrative Medicine (IIIM), Jammu
Non-CSIR:
- Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), Delhi
- University of Saurashtra
- University of Hyderabad
- University of Delhi
- National Institute of Immunology (NII), Delhi
- Center for DNA Fingerprinting and Diagnostics (CDFD),
Hyderabad
- Bhabha Atomic Research Centre (BARC), Mumbai
- All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS), Delhi
- Postgraduate Institute of Medical Education and Research
(PGIMER), Chandigarh
- Tuberculosis Research Centre (TRC), Chennai
- Indian Institute of Science (IISc), Bangalore
- Bose Institute, Kolkata
- International Centre for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology
(ICGEB), Delhi
Industry:
- Sun Microsystems
- LeadInvent Technologies
- TCG Lifesciences
- Astra Zeneca India
- Lifecare Innovations Pvt. Ltd
- Jalaja Technologies
Source:
Press Information Bureau
Date: 15 September, 2008

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