| Literature DB >> 26844568 |
Adrián Velazquez-Campoy1, Javier Sancho, Olga Abian, Sonia Vega.
Abstract
Experimental and computational screenings are currently widespread tools for identifying either potential ligands for a given target or potential targets for a given chemical compound. In particular, ligand-induced stabilization against thermal denaturation (or thermal shift assay) is an easy and convenient experimental procedure for finding compounds able to control the activity of a protein target (e.g., allosteric or competitive inhibitors interfering with its activity, allosteric activators enhancing its activity, or pharmacological chaperones avoiding aggregation, unfolding or degradation). Despite its simplicity the thermal shift assay does not lack some important drawbacks. Here we describe this methodology, its application to structured and unstructured protein targets, and we discuss successful cases of identification of bioactive compounds for conformational disorders associated to loss of function (phenylketonuria) and infectious diseases (gastric ulcer and hepatitis C).Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26844568 DOI: 10.2174/1389450117666160201110449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Drug Targets ISSN: 1389-4501 Impact factor: 3.465