Subscribe to RSS





Chemistry News

- ACS Mobile
Chemistry Blog
- Make Your Compound Go Away
In the Pipeline
- The Periodic Table of David Bradley
Sciencebase Science Blog
- Closed Captioning Videos: A way to create equal grounds to students with differences
ASSETT
- Good Suppliers - And The Other Guys
In the Pipeline
- Is It Real?
Periodic Tabloid
- Real chemistry at the periodic table party
Sciencebase Science Blog
- my balls have finally dropped
Everyday Scientist
- APS Meeting: Quasicrystal adventures
The Sceptical Chymist
- Scientific shopping
Chemistry Blog
- More Blogroll
In the Pipeline

Not simple analogues, but ligands for biological switches

by Phil on Mar 03 2009 (838 Views)

A while ago I blogged about a paper where a set of structures analogous to estrogen were made. Now a follow-up paper has appeared in Protein Engineering, Design and Selection. The aim was actually not to make simple analogues of estrogen, but to use the compounds to create specific receptor proteins.

Starting from the human estrogen receptor α, the authors employed directed evolution: they changed the residues in proximity of the ligand by mutagenesis, screened the resulting mutants, and selected the best receptor mutants for the next round. After the third round of directed evolution, they came up with an optimized mutant that bound to CV3320 with an EC50 of 55 nM, while the affinity to 17β-estradiol was reduced by a factor of 10 (4 nM).

CV3320 and estradiol

While the authors admit that the selectivity over 17β-estradiol could still be improved, it still is a nice piece of work that demonstrates the power of directed evolution. This way, a protein receptor for a substrate that does not occur in nature can be made. Such a receptor can be used to make biological switches.


Posted on : Mar 03 2009
Tags: , , ,
Posted under chemical biology |



Google Ads





Recent Chemistry

Impacts of Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticle Size, Pore Ordering, and Pore Integrity on Hemolytic Activity
(Journal of the American Chemical Society)
ChemFeeds Nav: [Leave a Comment][See Related]

Good Chemistry Books


Natural Product Chemistry at a Glance

Cytochrome P450 Protocols