Sanofi and AstraZeneca to share compound libraries

November 20, 2015 Off By Dino Mustafić

Sanofi and AstraZeneca have announced a direct exchange of 210,000 compounds from their respective, proprietary compound libraries. The exchange represents a novel, open innovation model of collaboration between two pharmaceutical companies, the companies said on Wednesday.

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According to the companies’ joint press release, it will enhance the chemical diversity of the compound collections of both companies and allow each company to screen a broader, more diverse chemical space as the starting point in the search for new, small-molecule medicines.

The companies said they have selected the compounds to exchange based on differences from those previously existing in their own libraries. Chemical structures and synthetic procedures will be shared to facilitate the use of these compounds. The compounds will be exchanged in sufficient quantity to enable the receiving company to carry out high throughput screening (HTS) for several years to determine whether they are active against specific biological targets. If a compound matches a target, it may go through several modifications to optimize its structure before being classified as a “lead compound” and potentially taken forward through development.

Elias Zerhouni, President, Global R&D, Sanofi, said: “We are happy to work with other companies if it will speed the discovery of new life-saving or life-enhancing therapies for patients. We believe that this collaboration will increase our capacity to deliver innovative solutions that have the potential to add significant medical value and transform lives.”

Mene Pangalos, Executive Vice President, Innovative Medicines & Early Development at AstraZeneca, said: “We have worked hard to enrich our compound library in recent years and this exchange, which is by far the largest we have achieved, enables us to significantly increase its diversity. Most importantly, it will accelerate our ability to identify unique starting points that could become new medicines for patients.”

There are no payments associated with the exchanged compounds either upfront or in terms of downstream payments in the event that they form the basis of a successful clinical candidate. Each company can investigate the compounds it receives without restrictions on targeted disease areas, the press release concluded.