Abstract

The Lilly TB Drug Discovery Initiative has opened its labs and acquired the first compounds it will develop against tuberculosis. Created in mid-2007, the Seattle-based public-private partnership includes Eli Lilly & Co.; the Infectious Disease Research Institute (IDRI), a nonprofit organization focused on diseases that inordinately affect the world’s poor populations; and NIH’s National Institute of Allergy & Infectious Diseases. The compounds are a new class of antibiotics from the British biotech firm Summit and CPZEN-45 from Tokyo-based Microbial Chemistry Research Foundation. CPZEN-45 may offer a new mechanism of action against TB and is known to be active against drug-resistant forms. The TB initiative is also beginning its main task of screening compounds against new bacterial targets. Lilly has opened its library of 500,000 compounds, and Merck & Co. is making available to the partnership libraries of antibacterial compounds and natural products. By helping to fill the early-stage drug development...

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