Literature DB >> 17009317

Designing allosteric peptide ligands targeting a globular protein.

Karen A Selz1, Tatiana I Samoylova, Alexandre M Samoylov, Vitaly J Vodyanoy, Arnold J Mandell.   

Abstract

Patented signal analytic algorithms applied to hydrophobically transformed, numerical amino acid sequences have previously been used to design short, protein-targeted, L or D retro-inverso peptides. These peptides have demonstrated allosteric and/or indirect agonist effects on a variety of G-protein and tyrosine kinase coupled membrane receptors with 30% to over 80% hit rates. Here we extend these approaches to a globular protein target. We designed eight peptide ligands targeting an ELISA antibody responsive protein, beta-galactosidase, betaGAL. Three of the eight 14mer peptides allosterically activated betaGAL with ELISA methodology. Using Bayesian statistics, this 38% hit rate would have occurred 2 x 10(-9) by chance. These peptides demonstrated binding site competitive or noncompetitive interactions, suggesting allosteric site multiplicity with respect to their betaGAL binding-mediated ELISA signal. Kinetic studies demonstrated the temperature dependence of the betaGAL peptide binding functions. Using the van't Hoff relation, we found evidence for enthalpy-entropy compensation. This relation is often found for hydrophobic interactions in aqueous media, and is consistent with the postulated hydrophobic series encoding underlying our protein-targeted, peptide design methods. It appears that our algorithmic, hydrophobic autocovariance eigenvector template approach to the design of allosteric peptides targeting membrane receptors may also be applicable to the design of peptide ligands targeting nonmembrane involved globular proteins. Copyright 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17009317     DOI: 10.1002/bip.20607

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biopolymers        ISSN: 0006-3525            Impact factor:   2.505


  5 in total

1.  PROTDES: CHARMM toolbox for computational protein design.

Authors:  María Suárez; Pablo Tortosa; Alfonso Jaramillo
Journal:  Syst Synth Biol       Date:  2009-07-02

2.  Peptides complementary to the active loop of porin P2 from Haemophilus influenzae modulate its activity.

Authors:  Marco Cantisani; Mariateresa Vitiello; Annarita Falanga; Emiliana Finamore; Marilena Galdiero; Stefania Galdiero
Journal:  Int J Nanomedicine       Date:  2012-05-11

3.  A computational approach identifies two regions of Hepatitis C Virus E1 protein as interacting domains involved in viral fusion process.

Authors:  Roberto Bruni; Angela Costantino; Elena Tritarelli; Cinzia Marcantonio; Massimo Ciccozzi; Maria Rapicetta; Gamal El Sawaf; Alessandro Giuliani; Anna Rita Ciccaglione
Journal:  BMC Struct Biol       Date:  2009-07-29

4.  Common molecular mechanism of the hepatic lesion and the cardiac parasympathetic regulation in chronic hepatitis C infection: a critical role for the muscarinic receptor type 3.

Authors:  Sanja Glišić; David P Cavanaugh; Krishnan K Chittur; Milan Sencanski; Vladimir Perovic; Tijana Bojić
Journal:  BMC Bioinformatics       Date:  2016-03-22       Impact factor: 3.169

Review 5.  Targeting the C-Terminal Domain Small Phosphatase 1.

Authors:  Harikrishna Reddy Rallabandi; Palanivel Ganesan; Young Jun Kim
Journal:  Life (Basel)       Date:  2020-05-08
  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.