Richard A. Houghten
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Richard A. Houghten is a heterocyclic organic chemist and founder of the journal ''Peptide Research'', which was later merged with the ''International Journal of Peptide and Protein Research,'' to become the ''Journal of Peptide Research''. His work mainly concerns peptide activity and
pharmacology Pharmacology is a branch of medicine, biology and pharmaceutical sciences concerned with drug or medication action, where a drug may be defined as any artificial, natural, or endogenous (from within the body) molecule which exerts a biochemica ...
. He is the founder and president of the Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies (TPIMS), a biomedical research institute. Houghten pioneered the "tea-bag" approach of producing peptides for pharmacological work. He is author of over five hundred scientific papers, 38 of which have been cited at least one hundred times. His h-index is over 60.


Biography

Houghten received his PhD in organic chemistry from the University of California, Berkeley in 1975. He had previously received a BS in chemistry from California State University, Fresno and an M.S. in chemistry from Berkeley. He held a postdoctoral fellowship at the University of California, San Francisco, then an assistant professorship at
Mount Sinai School of Medicine The Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai (ISMMS or Mount Sinai), formerly the Mount Sinai School of Medicine, is a private medical school in New York City. It is the academic teaching arm of the Mount Sinai Health System, which manages eigh ...
,
City University of New York The City University of New York ( CUNY; , ) is the Public university, public university system of Education in New York City, New York City. It is the largest urban university system in the United States, comprising 25 campuses: eleven Upper divis ...
, and then joined the Scripps Research Institute, La Jolla, working with
Richard Lerner Richard Alan Lerner (August 26, 1938 – December 2, 2021) was an American research chemist. Best known for his work on catalytic antibodies, Lerner served as President of The Scripps Research Institute (TSRI) until January 1, 2012, and was a ...
. Houghten branched out to the business world in the 1980s, forming Multiple Peptide Systems in 1986, the Torrey Pines Institute for Molecular Studies (TPIMS) in 1988 and Houghten Pharmaceuticals, Inc. in 1990.


Work in combinatorial biology

Combinatorial biology In biotechnology, combinatorial biology is the creation of a large number of compounds (usually proteins or peptides) through technologies such as phage display. Similar to combinatorial chemistry, compounds are produced by biosynthesis rather ...
is the generation of large numbers of molecules (usually peptides, enzymes or other
polypeptide Peptides (, ) are short chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds. Long chains of amino acids are called proteins. Chains of fewer than twenty amino acids are called oligopeptides, and include dipeptides, tripeptides, and tetrapeptides. A p ...
s in biology) with non-natural metabolic pathways. The resulting set of molecules is referred to as a library. Because traditional methods of chemical discovery and selection relied on "natural" pathways (those formed by sources found in the wild and brought into the library), creation of the requisite number of peptides for new
drug discovery In the fields of medicine, biotechnology and pharmacology, drug discovery is the process by which new candidate medications are discovered. Historically, drugs were discovered by identifying the active ingredient from traditional remedies or by ...
was impractical. New drugs needed to be built from specific combinations of proteins among the trillions of possible combinations. Synthetic avenues for peptide generation became an important venue for drug creation in the 1980s. In 1985, Houghten's most cited paper (cited 650 times, according to Scopus) published his method for the synthesis of massive numbers of peptides—enough for practical use in pharmacological work—in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. This method was referred to as the "tea-bag" method because deprotected peptides are enclosed in mesh bags and dipped quickly into liquid solutions containing activated amino acids (or other organic compounds). The peptide is thus elongated one amino acid at each step, and by careful movement of each teabag, a series of related peptides can be made. By another variation, "split and mix", tens of millions of very diverse peptides can be made, and then assayed by some technique. Very precise deconvolution of the results, or alternatively, marking the peptide beads, can correlate sequence and activity. This allowed " he capture ofinformation in a day that you couldn't get in a hundred years before" according to Houghten. The problem of generating and sequencing large libraries of peptides suitable for pharmaceutical work remained. Selection and identification of specific desired molecular traits (e.g. antigen response, antimicrobial response) required a selection algorithm and process. In 1991, he and his colleagues published one of the major papers in combinatorial biology—the paper described a method to generate peptides capturable to contemporary protein microarrays through the creation of synthetic peptide combinatorial libraries (SPCL). Houghten continued his work in combinatorial biology with an article in ''Methods'', the journals section of Methods in Enzymology. which is the standard multi-volume references set for biochemical methodology in research.


Awards

* Vincent du Vigneaud Award for Excellence in Peptide Science (2000) * American Chemical Society's Ralph F. Hirschmann Award in Peptide Chemistry (2004) * Bruce Merrifield Award (2005) * Fellow of the American Association of Pharmaceutical Scientists (2006) * Dan K. Richardson Entrepreneurship Program's 2011 Entrepreneur of the Year


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Houghten, Richard A. 21st-century American biologists American molecular biologists UC Berkeley College of Chemistry alumni Year of birth missing (living people) Living people Scripps Research faculty