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August 2020

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QA, QC Jobs at at HETERO LABS | B.Pharm, MSc

Hetero is one of India’s leading generic pharmaceutical companies and the world’s largest producer of anti-retroviral drugs for the treatment of HIV/AIDS. Backed by over 25 years of expertise in the pharmaceutical industry, Hetero’s strategic business areas spread across APIs, Generics, Biosimilars, Custom Pharmaceutical services and Branded Generics.

Faculty Recruitment in DDM College of Pharmacy

DDM College of Pharmacy (DDMCP), Gondlur was established in 2009 for imparting the education in pharmacy to cater the skilled professionals for pharmaceutical industry. The college is affiliated to the Himachal Pradesh University and recognised by the Pharmacy Council of India (PCI). Institute of Pharmacy is located at village Gondpur – Banehra, 07km form Panjala on State Highyway-6 and 45km from district HQ UNA towards Talwara.

There was a tragic event that shook the world in the 1960’s, when a large number of babies were born with severe deformities whose mothers had been prescribed a drug called ‘thalidomide’ for morning-sickness. “The problem was a result of the consumption of two enantiomers without separation. One of the isomer was toxic, while the other was the drug”, says Prof. A. S. Achalkumar, Department of Chemistry, IIT Guwahati. Prof Achalkumar and Prof. Yasuhiro Ishida from RIKEN, Wako-shi campus, Japan, have developed a simple and novel method to separate chiral enantiomers.

Chiral enantiomers are chemicals that have the same molecular formula but different three-dimensional arrangement of the constituent molecular segments. The separation of enantiomers is significant in bio-medical field because many biochemically active chemicals are found as mixtures of two enantiomers, one of which may be beneficial and the other, toxic.

The chemical properties of enantiomers are similar, which makes it very difficult to separate them, or to synthesize specifically one without being contaminated from the other enantiomer. “Nature is master in the exclusive production of enantiomerically pure amino acids and sugars, but man is still trying to master the art of enantioselective synthesis”, observes Prof Achalkumar. The current method to separate enantiomers is by chromatography, which is slow, energy intensive, and requires environmentally harmful solvents.


“Nature is master in the exclusive production of enantiomerically pure amino acids and sugars, but man is still trying to master the art of enantioselective synthesis”

The researchers have separated enantiomers with the use of helical supramolecular polymers. The helical polymers are formed by the salt formation of aromatic carboxylic acid and chiral amino alcohols. In this simple one-pot process they could resolve racemic mixtures into materials rich in one isomer. The interaction sites in supramolecular polymer not only help in the connection of the monomers but also in the recognition of chiral guests. When two salts with the same chirality are mixed, they undergo copolymerization and became soluble, while those with opposite chirality do not form copolymer and hence precipitate. The precipitated compound can be separated easily. The present system can be used for the enantioseparation of the abundant class of chiral amino alcohols, which has huge commercial potential.”


Prof. Ishida adds that although many supramolecular polymers are known, their enantio-separation ability has never been investigated so far. “Development of such process may help in reducing the price of chiral active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs) and finally that of the medical treatment, itself. In addition, such process can be extended to other classes of chiral molecules”, he says.

The group of researchers is led by Prof. A. S. Achalkumar, and Prof. Yasuhiro Ishida from RIKEN, Wako-shi campus, Japan. Their path-breaking work has recently been published in the prestigious journal, Nature Communications. The paper has been co-authored by Prof. Achalkumar, Prof. Ishida, Dr. Vakayil Praveen, Senior Scientist, CSIR-National Institute for Interdisciplinary Science and Technology, and research scholars Dr. Krishnachary Salikolimi, Ms. Kuniyo Yamada, and Dr. Noriko Horimoto. The research findings have been published in the journal, Nature Communications.

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A REVIEW COMMENTARY ON QUINIDINE KINETICS (PK MODELLING)

About Author
Mohd Riyaz Beg1* 1
Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Technology, Institute of Chemical Technology, Mumbai
*Corresponding author’s
email: phm19mr.beg@pg.ictmumbai.edu.in; mohdriyazbeg@gmail.com

Job Openings for Pharmacists (12 posts) under OSH&FW Society

Career for M.Pharm, MSc in the DST funded project at PGIMER

The PGIMER owes its inception to the vision of late Sardar Partap Singh Kairon, the then Chief Minister of Punjab and the distinguished medical educationists of the then combined state of Punjab, supported by the first Prime Minister of India Pt. Jawahar Lal Nehru who considered the institutions of scientific knowledge as temples of learning and the places of pilgrimage. The institute started in 1962 and Pt Jawahar Lal Nehru inaugurated the hospital now named “Nehru Hospital” on 7th July 1963.

Vacancy for Research Associate at Patanjali Pharma Pvt. Ltd