Recent computational advancements in the simulation of biochemical processes allow investigating the mechanisms involved in protein regulation with realistic physics-based models, at an atomistic level of resolution. These techniques allowed us to design a drug discovery approach, named Pharmacological Protein Inactivation by Folding Intermediate Targeting (PPI-FIT), based on the rationale of negatively regulating protein levels by targeting folding intermediates. Here, PPI-FIT was tested for the first time on the cellular prion protein (PrP), a cell surface glycoprotein playing a key role in fatal and transmissible neurodegenerative pathologies known as prion diseases. We predicted the all-atom structure of an intermediate appearing along the folding pathway of PrP and identified four different small molecule ligands for this conformer, all capable of selectively lowering the load of the protein by promoting its degradation. Our data support the notion that the level of target proteins could be modulated by acting on their folding pathways, implying a previously unappreciated role for folding intermediates in the biological regulation of protein expression.

Spagnolli, G., Massignan, T., Astolfi, A., Biggi, S., Rigoli, M., Brunelli, P., et al. (2021). Pharmacological inactivation of the prion protein by targeting a folding intermediate. COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY, 4(1) [10.1038/s42003-020-01585-x].

Pharmacological inactivation of the prion protein by targeting a folding intermediate

Faccioli, Pietro
;
2021

Abstract

Recent computational advancements in the simulation of biochemical processes allow investigating the mechanisms involved in protein regulation with realistic physics-based models, at an atomistic level of resolution. These techniques allowed us to design a drug discovery approach, named Pharmacological Protein Inactivation by Folding Intermediate Targeting (PPI-FIT), based on the rationale of negatively regulating protein levels by targeting folding intermediates. Here, PPI-FIT was tested for the first time on the cellular prion protein (PrP), a cell surface glycoprotein playing a key role in fatal and transmissible neurodegenerative pathologies known as prion diseases. We predicted the all-atom structure of an intermediate appearing along the folding pathway of PrP and identified four different small molecule ligands for this conformer, all capable of selectively lowering the load of the protein by promoting its degradation. Our data support the notion that the level of target proteins could be modulated by acting on their folding pathways, implying a previously unappreciated role for folding intermediates in the biological regulation of protein expression.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Animals; Binding Sites; Computer Simulation; Drug Evaluation, Preclinical; Endoplasmic Reticulum; Fibroblasts; HEK293 Cells; Humans; Ligands; Lysosomes; Mice; Peptide Fragments; Prion Diseases; Prion Proteins; Protein Folding; Protein Processing, Post-Translational; Reproducibility of Results
English
2021
4
1
62
open
Spagnolli, G., Massignan, T., Astolfi, A., Biggi, S., Rigoli, M., Brunelli, P., et al. (2021). Pharmacological inactivation of the prion protein by targeting a folding intermediate. COMMUNICATIONS BIOLOGY, 4(1) [10.1038/s42003-020-01585-x].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/405623
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