Historically, public-sector researchers have performed the upstream, basic research that elucidated the underlying mechanisms of disease and identified promising points of intervention, whereas corporate researchers have performed the downstream, applied research resulting in the discovery of drugs for the treatment of diseases and have carried out development activities to bring them to market. However, the boundaries between the roles of the public and private sectors have shifted substantially since the dawn of the biotechnology era, and the public sector now has a much more direct role in the applied-research phase of drug discovery.
CITATION STYLE
Stevens, A. J., Benson, D. E., Jensen, J. J., Dodson, S. E., & Rohrbaugh, M. L. (2018). The Role of Public Sector Research in the Discovery of Drugs and Vaccines: an Update. Proceedings for Annual Meeting of The Japanese Pharmacological Society, WCP2018(0), CL–16. https://doi.org/10.1254/jpssuppl.wcp2018.0_cl-16
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