By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Online Tech Guru
  • News
  • PC/Windows
  • Mobile
  • Apps
  • Gadgets
  • More
    • Gaming
    • Accessories
    • Editor’s Choice
    • Press Release
Reading: Where Are All the AI Drugs?
Best Deal
Font ResizerAa
Online Tech GuruOnline Tech Guru
  • News
  • Mobile
  • PC/Windows
  • Gaming
  • Apps
  • Gadgets
  • Accessories
Search
  • News
  • PC/Windows
  • Mobile
  • Apps
  • Gadgets
  • More
    • Gaming
    • Accessories
    • Editor’s Choice
    • Press Release

Tech News, Latest Technology, Mobiles, Laptops

News Room News Room 18 July 2025
FacebookLike
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow
  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
© Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Online Tech Guru > News > Where Are All the AI Drugs?
News

Where Are All the AI Drugs?

News Room
Last updated: 17 July 2025 20:32
By News Room 5 Min Read
Share
SHARE

A new drug usually starts with a tragedy.

Peter Ray knows that. Born in what is now Zimbabwe, the child of a mechanic and a radiology technician, Ray fled with his family to South Africa during the Zimbabwean War of Liberation. He remembers the journey there in 1980 in a convoy of armored cars. As the sun blazed down, a soldier taught 8-year-old Ray how to fire a machine gun. But his mother kept having to stop. She didn’t feel well.

Doctors in Cape Town diagnosed her with cancer. Ray remembers going to her radiation treatments with her, the hospital rooms, the colostomy bags. She loved the beach, loved to walk along the line where the water met the land. But it got harder for her to go. Sometimes she came home from the hospital for a while and it seemed like things would get better. Ray got his hopes up. Then things would fall apart again. Surgery, radiation, chemotherapy—the treatments that were on the table in the 1980s—were soon exhausted. As she lay dying, he promised her he was going to make a difference, somehow. He was 13 years old.

Ray studied to become a medicinal chemist, first in South Africa, taking out loans to fund his studies, then at the University of Liverpool. He worked at drug companies across the UK, on numerous projects. Now, at 53, he is one of the lead drug designers at a pharmaceutical company called Recursion. He thinks about that promise to his mom a lot. “It’s lived with me my whole life,” he says. “I need to get drugs on the market that impact cancer.”

The desire to stop your own tragedies from happening to someone else may be a strong motivator. But the process of drug discovery has always been grindingly, gruelingly slow. First, chemists like Ray zero in on their target—usually a protein, a long string of amino acids coiled and folded upon itself. They call up a model of it on their computer screen and watch it turn in a black void. They note the curves and declivities in its surface, places where a molecule, sailing through the darkness like a spaceship, could dock. Then, atom by atom, they try to build the spaceship.

Animation: Balarama Heller

When the new molecule is ready, the chemists pass it along to the biologists, who test it on living cells in warm rooms. More tragedy: Many cells die, for reasons that are not always clear. Biology is complex, and the new drug doesn’t work as expected. The chemists will have to create another, and another, tweaking, adjusting, often for years. One biologist, Keith Mikule of Insilico Medicine, told me of his experience at a different drug company. After five years of work, their best molecule had unforeseen, dangerous side effects that meant they could take it no further. “There was a large team of chemists, a large team of biologists, thousands of molecules made, and no real progress,” he said.

If a team is very lucky, they get a molecule that, in mice, does what it’s supposed to. They get a chance to give it to a small group of healthy human volunteers, a phase I trial. If the volunteers stay healthy, then they give it to more people, including those with the disease in question, in a phase II. If the sick people don’t get sicker, they get a chance—phase III—to give it to more sick people, as many as they can find, as diverse a group as possible.

At each stage, for reasons few people understand and fewer can predict, great rafts of drugs drop out. More than 90 percent of hopefuls fail along the way. When you meet drug hunters, you might ask them, cautiously, tenderly, if they’ve ever had a drug make it. “It’s very rare,” says Mikule, who has one drug (niraparib, for ovarian cancer) to his name. “We’re unicorns.”

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Copy Link
Leave a comment

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Roblox’s New Age Verification Feature Uses AI to Scan Teens’ Video Selfies

News Room News Room 18 July 2025
FacebookLike
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow

Trending

Congress Passes GENIUS Act in Major Win for US Crypto Industry

“Competition will be fierce,” says Christian Catalini, founder at MIT Cryptoeconomics Lab and co-creator of…

18 July 2025

Right-wing groups put pro-Palestinian students on an ICE ‘hit list’

For nearly two years, students at Columbia University have warned that they’re being targeted —…

18 July 2025

Former German development studio Artex brought back to life as a publisher after 25 years

A new indie publisher has been established in Frankfurt, Germany - Artex. The new venture…

18 July 2025
Gaming

Line of Fire: Burnt Moon Board Game Review

Of the many war-themed board games, Osprey Games’ Undaunted series is arguably one of the best in the current board game generation. These games' unique deck-building mechanics, mixed with historical…

News Room 18 July 2025

Your may also like!

News

The Best Total Meal Replacement Shakes

News Room 18 July 2025
News

The crypto industry got what it paid for

News Room 18 July 2025
Gaming

Get Every Borderlands Game for Just $16 With This Humble Bundle Sale

News Room 17 July 2025
News

ICE Is Getting Unprecedented Access to Medicaid Data

News Room 17 July 2025

Our website stores cookies on your computer. They allow us to remember you and help personalize your experience with our site.

Read our privacy policy for more information.

Quick Links

  • Subscribe
  • Privacy Policy
  • Contact
  • Terms of Use
Advertise with us

Socials

Follow US
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?