skip to content

Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry

 

I am now Professor Emeritus, but continue research with several ongoing research grants as Director of Research.

There is a strong interest in the development of novel molecular property calculations and data analysis methods combined with the simulation of biomolecules and materials. Current research interests include drug discovery methods (SAR, simulation of biomolecules and ADME) and molecular data analysis (machine learning, deep learning) as well as drug discovery projects against specific targets. Recent work has seen compounds evaluated in human clinical studies in Addenbrooke's hospital.

 

Career highlights

I gained my Ph.D. (supervisor Prof. Peter Murray-Rust) in X-ray Crystallography, computational chemistry and Organic Synthesis from the University of Stirling.  One of the highlights was the first co-crystallisation of a reactant and product of a chemical reaction in a single crystal. 

As a Senior Research Scientist at the Wellcome Foundation I guided the development of the Computer-aided Molecular Design group. This included Protein Crystallography (the first in a pharmaceutical company), Molecular Transport properties and Electrochemistry.  I designed the GASP and GOLD computer programs which are used extensively in the pharmaceutical industry, I am a co-inventor of Zomig (a drug for migraine) and invented two other compounds at Wellcome that entered Phase-2 clinical development. 

As Vice President for Collaborative Research at Tripos Inc., a biotechnology company in St. Louis Mo. we created the first commercial screening library, Optiverse (100K compounds), and I assisted in setting up three biotechnology companies (Arena Pharmaceuticals, Phase-1 Molecular Toxicology and Signase).  I obtained and directed a significant BBSRC grant with University College London (discovering activators of soluble guanylate cyclise and working with The Technology Partnership to develop the Baseplate robot) and managed collaborative research and contract research in drug discovery with many large Pharmaceutical companies. Two of the research programs resulted in drugs for obesity (lorcaserin) and sleep disorders/alzheimers (nelotanserin).

In 1999 I moved to the University of Cambridge as Founding Director of the Unilever Centre for Molecular Sciences Informatics, a new institute as part of the Chemistry department, now the Centre for Molecular Informatics, part of the Theoretical Group.

I have served on the boards of a number of emerging biotech and technology companies and serve on a number of grant awarding bodies and am a Fellow of Clare College Cambridge. I have been a consultant to many large pharma companies. I have additionally received over £20M in grants over the last ten years, from Wellcome Trust, NHS, EPSRC, BBSRC, DTI, MRC and Pharmaceutical and software companies.

I was elected Professor of Computational Medicine at Imperial College London, and direct several groups working on Big Data projects in diverse areas such as metabonomics, clinical data analysis, imaging (the first imaging of a tumour in 3D using mass spectrometry.

Teaching

Teaching commitments are principally now mentoring and examination.

Lectures

I lecture regularly at conferences, in companies and to  undergraduates and post graduates. e.g. The Gordon Converence on CAMD, 2023 - Plenary Lecture

Environment

The Centre for Molecular Informatics has four research groups, Glen, Goodman, Bender and Colwell.

Further Funding Information

We receive funding from most research councils, the EU, charities and companies. We thank them all and are very grateful to all our funders, particularly Unilever whose generosity founded the Centre for Molecular Informatics.

Publications

Prediction of cytochrome P450 xenobiotic metabolism: tethered docking and reactivity derived from ligand molecular orbital analysis.
JD Tyzack, MJ Williamson, R Torella, RC Glen
– Journal of chemical information and modeling
(2013)
53,
1294
Quantifying the shifts in physicochemical property space introduced by the metabolism of small organic molecules
J Kirchmair, A Howlett, J Peironcely, DS Murrell, M Williamson, SE Adams, T Hankemeier, L van Buren, G Duchateau, W Klaffke, RC Glen
– Journal of Cheminformatics
(2013)
5,
o12
Relating GPCRs pharmacological space based on ligands chemical similarities
A Koutsoukas, R Torella, G Drakakis, A Bender, RC Glen
– Journal of Cheminformatics
(2013)
5,
P26
Annotating targets with pathways: extending approaches to mode of action analysis
S Liggi, A Koutsoukas, YK Motamedi, RC Glen, A Bender
– Journal of Cheminformatics
(2013)
5,
p15
Chemogenomics approaches to rationalizing the mode-of-action of traditional Chinese and Ayurvedic medicines.
F Mohd Fauzi, A Koutsoukas, R Lowe, K Joshi, T-P Fan, RC Glen, A Bender
– Journal of chemical information and modeling
(2013)
53,
661
How do metabolites differ from their parent molecules and how are they excreted?
J Kirchmair, A Howlett, JE Peironcely, DS Murrell, MJ Williamson, SE Adams, T Hankemeier, L van Buren, G Duchateau, W Klaffke, RC Glen
– Journal of chemical information and modeling
(2013)
53,
354
Anti-cancer drug development: Computational strategies to identify and target proteins involved in cancer metabolism
L Mak, S Liggi, L Tan, K Kusonmano, JM Rollinger, A Koutsoukas, RC Glen, J Kirchmair
– Current Pharmaceutical Design
(2013)
19,
532
Linking Ayurveda and Western medicine by integrative analysis.
FM Fauzi, A Koutsoukas, R Lowe, K Joshi, T-P Fan, RC Glen, A Bender
– J Ayurveda Integr Med
(2013)
4,
117
OPSIN: Taming the jungle of IUPAC chemical nomenclature
DM Lowe, P Murray-Rust, RC Glen
– ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
(2013)
246,
Adventures in drug discovery: For now we see through a glass, darkly
RC Glen
– ABSTRACTS OF PAPERS OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
(2013)
246,
  • <
  • 9 of 26
  • >

Research Group

Research Interest Groups

Telephone number

01223 336472

Email address

rcg28@cam.ac.uk