Prestwick Chemical Library®: 1760 drugs mainly FDA-approved
Prestwick Chemical Library®: 1760 FDA-approved & EMA-approved drugs for HTS and HCS screening
A team of in-house medicinal chemists and pharmacists has committed to selecting highly relevant screening compounds for >25 years, in order to offer a screening collection of off-patent drugs with high chemical and pharmacological diversity, as well as known bioavailability and safety in humans.We provide you with the professional technical support along with the high-quality products at the most competitive price and the shortest delivery time.
A diversified marketed drugs library targeting +600 targets designed for repurposing/repositioning
A unique collection of 1760 small molecules, 98% being marketed approved drugs (mostly FDA-approved, several approved in Europe (EMA) and Japan (PMDA)
Approved agencies for every drug are available,
High chemical diversity, assessed medicinal activity
Covers the most comprehensive range of targets and research areas (600 targets addressed) (according mostly WHO ATC Classification 5, please view Therapeutic group distribution graph below)
More than 600 targets addressed (see graph below)
Fast delivery
Specially designed to increase potential high-quality and safe hits
Constant in-house quality control ensures high purity and stable molecules
Including a database with Newly identified targets and New Application data (according to publications)
Hit-list examination and expansion (OFFERED FOR FREE) and Analoging service around hits/leads
Hit-likeness and hit-workability have been reported over the past 25 years by users in 500+ publications
Publications citing the Prestwick Chemical Library®
Rademakers, T. et al. Identification of Compounds Protecting Pancreatic Islets against Oxidative Stress Using a 3D Pseudoislet Screening Platform. Advanced Biology 7 (12), 2300264 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1002/adbi.202300264
Selvin, T. et al. Phenotypic Screening Platform Identifies Statins as Enhancers of Immune Cell-Induced Cancer Cell Death. BMC Cancer 23 (1), 164 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12885-023-10645-4
Wehrli, L. et al. The Action of Physiological and Synthetic Steroids on the Calcium Channel CatSper in Human Sperm. Front Cell Dev Biol 11, 1221578 (2023). https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2023.1221578