University of California San Francisco

brian-shoichet
Brian Shoichet, PhD

Professor, Pharmaceutical Chemistry

Link to Pharmacy Profile/Bio

Address

1700 4th Street, #508D
San Francisco, CA 94158
United States

Email: [email protected]
Phone: 415-514-4126
Fax: 415-514-4260

    Education

    Institution Degree Dept or School End Date
    University of California, San Francisco Ph.D. Graduate Division (Pharmaceutical Chemistry) 1991

    Awards & Honors

    Award Conferred By Date
    Society for Biomolecular Sciences Accomplishment Award 2011
    Topliss Lectureship University of Michigan 2011
    Abbott Lectureship Yale University 2009
    Swiss Universities 3e Cycle en Chimie (Lausanne, Bern, Friborg, Geneva) 2008
    Novartis Chemistry Lecturer (Cambridge, Basel, Vienna, Horsham, Tsukuba, Emeryville) 2006/2007
    Astra Lectureship University of Ottawa 2004
    Dean’s Award for Teaching Excellence Northwestern University 2001
    CAREER Award National Science Foundation 1998/2003
    Career Development Award PhRMA Foundation 1997/1999
    Damon Runyon-Walter Winchell Cancer Research Fellow 1993/1996

    Grants and Funding

    • A Web-Based Automatic Virtual Screening System | NIH | 2004-08-01 - 2025-04-30 | Role: Principal Investigator
    • Degenerative and Dementing Diseases of Aging | NIH | 1981-01-01 - 2025-03-31 | Role: Co-Investigator
    • Illuminating the Druggable GPCR-ome | NIH | 2017-09-15 - 2023-08-31 | Role: Co-Principal Investigator
    • Development and Testing of New Computational Methods for Ligand Discovery and Mechanism | NIH | 2017-06-01 - 2022-05-31 | Role: Principal Investigator
    • Molecular Details of Psychoactive Drug Actions | NIH | 2017-03-06 - 2021-12-31 | Role: Co-Principal Investigator
    • A Specific Mechanism for non-specific inhibition | NIH | 1992-08-01 - 2019-05-31 | Role: Principal Investigator
    • Design and Experimental Testing of New Docking Methods | NIH | 1999-08-01 - 2018-11-30 | Role: Principal Investigator
    • Scalable technologies for illuminating the druggable GPCR-ome | NIH | 2014-08-01 - 2018-04-30 | Role: Co-Principal Investigator
    • Bio-Organic Biomedical Mass Spectrometry Resource | NIH | 1982-03-01 - 2015-05-31 | Role: Co-Investigator
    • Structure, Function and Inhibition of Beta-Lactamases | NIH | 2001-08-01 - 2015-02-28 | Role: Principal Investigator
    • Resource for Biocomputing, Visualization, and Informatics | NIH/NCRR | 1976-06-01 - 2012-09-14 | Role: Co-Investigator
    • Promiscuous and Specific Inhibitors of Cruzain | NIH | 2007-09-01 - 2008-08-31 | Role: Principal Investigator

    Publications

    MOST RECENT PUBLICATIONS FROM A TOTAL OF 296
    1. Automated docking screens: a feasibility study.
      Irwin JJ, Shoichet BK, Mysinger MM, Huang N, Colizzi F, Wassam P, Cao Y| | PubMed
    2. Predicting ligand binding affinity with alchemical free energy methods in a polar model binding site.
      Boyce SE, Mobley DL, Rocklin GJ, Graves AP, Dill KA, Shoichet BK| | PubMed
    3. Docking and chemoinformatic screens for new ligands and targets.
      Kolb P, Ferreira RS, Irwin JJ, Shoichet BK| | PubMed
    4. Divergent modes of enzyme inhibition in a homologous structure-activity series.
      Ferreira RS, Bryant C, Ang KK, McKerrow JH, Shoichet BK, Renslo AR| | PubMed
    5. Quantifying biogenic bias in screening libraries.
      Hert J, Irwin JJ, Laggner C, Keiser MJ, Shoichet BK| | PubMed
    6. Docking for fragment inhibitors of AmpC beta-lactamase.
      Teotico DG, Babaoglu K, Rocklin GJ, Ferreira RS, Giannetti AM, Shoichet BK| | PubMed
    7. Promiscuous aggregate-based inhibitors promote enzyme unfolding.
      Coan KE, Maltby DA, Burlingame AL, Shoichet BK| | PubMed
    8. Structure-based discovery of beta2-adrenergic receptor ligands.
      Kolb P, Rosenbaum DM, Irwin JJ, Fung JJ, Kobilka BK, Shoichet BK| | PubMed
    9. Molecular docking and ligand specificity in fragment-based inhibitor discovery.
      Chen Y, Shoichet BK| | PubMed
    10. Functional annotation and three-dimensional structure of Dr0930 from Deinococcus radiodurans, a close relative of phosphotriesterase in the amidohydrolase superfamily.
      Xiang DF, Kolb P, Fedorov AA, Meier MM, Fedorov LV, Nguyen TT, Sterner R, Almo SC, Shoichet BK, Raushel FM| | PubMed