Researchers at UC Santa Barbara have developed a new biotechnology that enables scientists to identify and engineer protease substrates, giving them the means of crafting pharmaceuticals to outsmart disease. Their work, authored by Patrick Daugherty, an assistant professor of Chemical Engineering, and Kevin Boulware, a PhD candidate, are published online today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

Proteases (or peptidases) are encoded by about two percent of genes in the human genome and play key roles in nearly all diseases. They act as "molecular scissors" by attaching to specific sequences contained within other proteins, called substrates, and cutting them in specific locations. For example, proteases are responsible for digesting food, for determining the proper time for cells to die, and for removing damaged proteins from the body.

But the substrates for most proteases are unknown, and this has limited researchers' ability to facilitate or thwart protease action. By identifying substrates, scientists gain the ability to regulate protein function, creating the capacity to speed up, slow down or eliminate particular protease actions. Daugherty's approach also makes it easier to measure protease action and thus develop pharmaceuticals that control protease activity.

Daugherty and Boulware developed a general combinatorial approach to identify optimal substrates of proteases, using quantitative kinetic screening of cellular libraries of peptide substrates (CLiPS). The results suggest that CLiPS will be broadly useful for characterizing proteases and developing optimal substrates for therapeutic applications.

Of the roughly 1,000 proteases in the human genome, only about ten percent of the targets have been identified, but Daugherty believes that scientists will identify nearly all of them in the next five to ten years. "This technology will give us a scalable tool that will allow us to effectively tackle this challenge," he says.



Contact: Barbara B. Gray
University of California - Santa Barbara

Tag Cloud

Order Advair (Fluticasone) Without Prescription
Order Antabuse (Disulfiram) Without Prescription
Order Armour (Thyroid) Without Prescription
Order Atripla (Efavirenz) Without Prescription
Order Augmentin (Clavulanate) Without Prescription
Order Benicar (Olmesartan) Without Prescription
Order Chantix (Varenicline) Without Prescription
Order Clonidine (Catapres) Without Prescription
Order Elavil (Amitriptyline) Without Prescription
Order Erythromycin (Robimycin) Without Prescription
Order Famvir (Famciclovir) Without Prescription
Order Hydrochlorothiazide (Microzide) Without Prescription
Order Imitrex (Sumatriptan) Without Prescription
Order Inderal (Propranolol) Without Prescription
Order Lasix (Furosemide) Without Prescription
Order Lumigan (Bimatoprost) Without Prescription
Order Medrol (Methylprednisolone) Without Prescription
Order Misoprostol (Cytotec) Without Prescription
Order Naltrexone (Revia) Without Prescription
Order Nexium (Esomeprazole) Without Prescription
Order Nolvadex (Tamoxifen) Without Prescription
Order Norvasc (Amlodipine Besylate) Without Prescription
Order Ortho Tri-Cyclen (TriNessa) Without Prescription
Order Retin-A (Tretinoin) Without Prescription
Order Spiriva (Tiotropium) Without Prescription
Order Suprax (Cefixime) Without Prescription
Order Synthroid (Levothyroxine) Without Prescription
Order Ventolin (Albuterol) Without Prescription
Order Zithromax (Azithromycin) Without Prescription