Literature DB >> 11029171

Rapid identification of substrates for novel proteases using a combinatorial peptide library.

G Rossé1, E Kueng, M G Page, V Schauer-Vukasinovic, T Giller, H W Lahm, P Hunziker, D Schlatter.   

Abstract

Fluorogenic substrates for assaying novel proteolytic enzymes could be rapidly identified using an easy, solid-phase combinatorial assay technology. The methodology was validated with leader peptidase of Escherichia coli using a subset of an intramolecularly quenched fluorogenic peptide library. The technique was extended toward the discovery of substrates for a new aspartic protease of pharmaceutical relevance (human napsin A). We demonstrated for the first time known to us that potent fluorogenic substrates can be discovered using extracts of cells expressing recombinant enzyme to screen the peptide library. The straightforward and rapid optimization of protease substrates greatly facilitates the drug discovery process by speeding up the development of high throughput screening assays and thus helps more effective exploitation of the enormous body of information and chemical structures emerging from genomics and combinatorial chemistry technologies.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11029171     DOI: 10.1021/cc000019y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Comb Chem        ISSN: 1520-4766


  6 in total

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Journal:  Mol Cell Proteomics       Date:  2016-11-16       Impact factor: 5.911

Review 3.  Global substrate specificity profiling of post-translational modifying enzymes.

Authors:  Sam L Ivry; Nicole O Meyer; Michael B Winter; Markus F Bohn; Giselle M Knudsen; Anthony J O'Donoghue; Charles S Craik
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4.  A PDZ domain-based assay for measuring HIV protease activity: assay design considerations.

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Journal:  Protein Sci       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 6.725

5.  On-bead screening of combinatorial libraries: reduction of nonspecific binding by decreasing surface ligand density.

Authors:  Xianwen Chen; Pauline H Tan; Yanyan Zhang; Dehua Pei
Journal:  J Comb Chem       Date:  2009 Jul-Aug

6.  Use of activity-based probes to develop high throughput screening assays that can be performed in complex cell extracts.

Authors:  Edgar Deu; Zhimou Yang; Flora Wang; Michael Klemba; Matthew Bogyo
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2010-08-05       Impact factor: 3.240

  6 in total

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