Paper & Manuscript Resource Academic_Area Help_Center Life Opening
Before_Submit After_Submit Ebook Seminar News Book_Comment Experiment Computation Photo_show Industry
ASAP_Paper Full-Story_Paper Notes Literature Conference Lit_discussion Non-electronic_lit Electronic_lit Oversea PhD
Paper_List Paper_Writing Thesis Software Glossary Faculty Non-electronic_book Electronic_book MMs'World Postdoc
发新话题
打印

[国外] Coupled proteins to reveal drug hits

Coupled proteins to reveal drug hits

Researchers in France have successfully attached an 'electrical switch' to a key class of membrane proteins targeted by many drugs. When a ligand binds to the protein - a G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) - it flips the switch, triggering an easily detected change in current.
The 'switch' coupled to the GPCR is a membrane-bound ion channel, which control the flow of ions into and out of cells. The coupled system, which directly reveals when a ligand binds the protein receptor, could be used as the basis for a new class of bionsensors, or as a way of screening potential new drugs against different types of GPCR, the researchers suggest
'GPCRs are the largest family of cell receptors found in the human body and are essential for controlling the response of cells to external stimuli and for communication between cells,' says Michel Vivaudou of the Institute of Structural Biology in Grenoble, who led the research team together with Christophe Moreau. 'Because of this they are a major target for drugs, and around 30 per cent of all drugs on the market are GPCR targets.'
Drug companies use a number of assays to test for binding to GPCRs, including radioactive or fluorescent tags attached to the ligand, or measuring 'downstream events' that occur when the GPCR is activated. The advantage of the new system, says Vivaudou, is that it would be inexpensive to operate and provide a sensitive and direct measure of a binding event.

Ligand binding triggers a detectable flow of electrons through the ion channel

© Nature

The French researchers decided to test if it was possible to couple together a GPCR with an ion channel because both proteins are known to change shape when they are activated. The team wanted to see if it was possible to mechanically couple the receptor to the ion channel, so that as the GPCR changed shape as a ligand binds, it would lever open the ion channel, producing a measurable ionic current.
The team genetically engineered a single 'fusion protein' of a GPCR covalently attached to an ion channel. They found they needed to shorten the sequence of the ion channel by around 25 amino acids to obtain an electrical signal in response to a ligand binding, but successfully achieved an electrical signal with two different GPCRs, demonstrating that the concept is feasible.
The next stage, says Vivaudou, who has applied for a patent on the technology, is to try to embed the protein system into an artificial membrane to create a small, self-contained system for use as a biosensor or in drug screening.
Simon Hadlington
Enjoy this story? Spread the word using the 'tools' menu on the left.


References
C J Moreau et al., Nature Nanotech, 2008, DOI: 10.1038/nnano.2008.242

Sept 7, 2008
Chemistry World

本帖最近评分记录
  • asymmsyn 在2008-9-10 09:07 评分: 金币 +2 原因: 感谢分享 再接再厉

TOP

More fulltext ebooks ...

Random Ebooks

Ebook Title Publisher Format Introducer Date
The Chemistry of Nanomaterials John Wiely & Sonpdf(editorial) westwolf 2006年07月02日02:44
Quantum Theory of Many-Particle Systems Othersdjvu skyflyzw 2007年01月31日14:18
Handbook of Thermal Analysis and Calorimetry, Volume 2 - Applications to inorganic and mis ... Elsevierpdf(editorial) cc136520 2008年03月11日14:21
Toxicological Chemistry and Biochemistry (3rd Ed) (2003) CRC Presspdf(editorial) paracyclophane 2006年07月03日05:10
Organic Reaction Mechanisms, 2001: An annual survey covering the literature dated January ... John Wiely & Sonpdf(editorial) Metalcarbene 2006年07月08日01:29

赞助商链接

赞助商链接

发新话题