Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Awards Grants to Schr?dinger, Inc. to Accelerate Drug Discovery in Women?s Health
November 18, 2021 at 07:00 am
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Schr?dinger, Inc. announced that it has been awarded a two-year, $4.9 million grant from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation to support a global women?s health initiative. The grant is part of a Gates Foundation initiative aimed at accelerating emerging opportunities to advance the field of contraceptive drug discovery. The emphasis of this initiative is to develop safe and effective, reversible, non-hormonal contraceptive agents with an improved overall tolerability and side effect profile compared to conventional (hormonal) methods. The goal is to empower women around the globe to take charge of their own health, enabling them to make informed decisions about family planning and have better access to contraceptive options that meet their needs. Schr?dinger will leverage its computationally driven structure-based drug discovery platform to identify novel, high-affinity, selective small molecule leads for a specific ovarian protein during this initial project.
Schrodinger, Inc. operates a physics-based computational platform that enables the discovery of molecules for drug development and materials applications. The software platform is used by biopharmaceutical and industrial companies, academic institutions, and government laboratories around the world. The Company operates through two segments: Software and Drug Discovery. The Software segment is focused on selling its software to transform drug discovery across the life sciences industry, as well as to customers in materials science industries. The Drug Discovery segment is focused on building a diverse portfolio of preclinical and clinical programs, internally and through collaborations, that have advanced to various stages of discovery and development. The Company's pipeline of drug discovery programs includes SGR-1505 (MALT1 Inhibitor), SGR-2921 (CDC7 Inhibitor), SGR-3515 (WEE1 Inhibitor). Its software was used by researchers around the world at more than 1,760 academic institutions.