MDL Information Systems, Inc. was a provider of R&D informatics products for the life sciences and chemicals industries. The company was launched as a computer-aided drug design firm in January 1978 in Hayward, California. The company was acquired by Symyx Technologies, Inc. in 2007. Subsequently Accelrys merged with Symyx. The Accelrys name was retained for the combined company. In 2014 Accelrys was acquired by Dassault Systemes. The Accelrys business unit was renamed BioVia.
History
Molecular Design Limited, Inc. was founded by Stuart Marson and W. Todd Wipke in 1978. With 15 years of research on computer synthesis at the University of California, Santa Cruz, Wipke, with Marson, fresh from a Ph.D. at Stanford University and a postdoctoral stint at the University of California, Berkeley, were convinced that computer-assisted molecular design was possible as a commercial enterprise. Employee #3 was Stephen Peacock, a colleague of Marson, and #4 was Jim Dill, a graduate student from Princeton, as was #5, Doug Hounshell, also a graduate of Princeton. MDL was the first company to provide interactive graphical registry and full and substructural retrieval. The company's initial products were first-of-their-kind systems for storing and retrieving molecules as graphical structures and for managing databases of chemical reactions and related data. These systems revolutionized the way scientists accessed and managed chemical information in the 1980s. From its initial pioneering of computer handling of graphical chemical structures with MACCS in 1979, MDL continued at the forefront of the field now known as cheminformatics. In 1985, MDL moved its corporate headquarters from Hayward to a larger campus in San Leandro, CA. In 1987, MDL was purchased by Maxwell Communications Corporation. In 1993, the company was publicly offered as MDL Information Systems, Inc. on the NASDAQ stock exchange. In 1997, the company was purchased by Reed Elsevier, the Anglo-Dutch publisher and information provider, becoming a wholly owned subsidiary of Elsevier, a publisher of scientific, technical and medical information. In February 2006, Elsevier MDL moved its corporate headquarters from San Leandro to San Ramon, CA. In October 2007, Elsevier MDL was acquired by Symyx Technologies, Inc., an R&D productivity company offering software, modular workflow tools and research services to global enterprises in the life sciences, chemicals, energy and consumer products industries. MDL was merged with Symyx Software, and the new combined organization is based in San Ramon, CA. The infrastructure-related software applications and databases of MDL, including CrossFire Beilstein, CrossFire Gmelin, the Patent Chemistry Database, xPharm and PharmaPendium — were retained by Elsevier and integrated within Elsevier's Science & Technology operations. The August 2007 press release announcing Symyx Technologies' acquisition of MDL indicates that combining Symyx and MDL offerings creates an expanded set of software solutions and services to enhance R&D productivity in the life sciences, chemicals and energy industries. The press release states: "With this solution set, Symyx will be able to accelerate its customers' move toward paperless labs by integrating content, collaborative desktops, automation and information management for users, workgroups and the enterprise."
Commercial system for computer handling of chemical reactions
Commercial system integrating chemical structures with data
PC-based chemistry database system, the Chemist's Personal Software Series
Commercial system integrating chemistry drawing and word processing
Commercial 3D structure database
Commercial system for storing structures of mixtures and formulations
Commercial client-server system for managing chemical and biological information
Commercial system for structure-based handling of generic structures
Searchable, "live" chemical structures in Web pages
Commercial system dynamically linking citations to electronic journal articles and patents
Web-based commercial system indexing multiple structure databases and linking to synthetic methodology databases and major reference works
Software application for predicting potential carcinogenic risk of compounds based on their structures
Complete, open, flexible and scalable n-tier informatics system supporting enterprise-wide business process, data and application integration for the life sciences
Advanced structure drawing with All-Purpose Drawing Tool and custom template toolbars, , 2004)
Structure-searchable patent chemistry information and online pharmacological information
Key laboratory workflow applications
Isentris-based application for building and managing compound registries
First electronically searchable FDA Drug Approval Packages
Out-of-the-box Reaction Planner for exploring precursor steps, integration of proprietary and commercial data.