蛋白质组
计算生物学
癌症
仿形(计算机编程)
化学
生物
生物信息学
遗传学
计算机科学
操作系统
作者
Mikhail M. Savitski,Friedrich Reinhard,Holger Franken,Thilo Werner,Maria Fälth Savitski,Dirk Eberhard,Daniel Martinez Molina,Rozbeh Jafari,Rebecca Dovega,Susan Klaeger,Bernhard Küster,P. Nordlund,Marcus Bantscheff,Gerard Drewes
出处
期刊:Science
[American Association for the Advancement of Science]
日期:2014-10-02
卷期号:346 (6205)
被引量:1030
标识
DOI:10.1126/science.1255784
摘要
Mapping human drug targets in the cell To understand both the beneficial and the side effects of a drug, one would need to know its full binding profile to all cellular proteins. Savitski et al. take significant steps toward meeting this daunting challenge. They monitored the unfolding or “melting” of over 7000 human proteins and measured how small-molecule binding changes individual melting profiles. As a proof of principle, over 50 targets were identified for an inhibitor known to bind a broad spectrum of kinases. Two cancer drugs, vemurafib and Alectinib, are known to have a side effect of photosensitivity. The thermal profiling approach identified drug-protein interactions responsible for these side effects. Science , this issue 10.1126/science.1255784
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