52 research outputs found

    Chemical Biology Gateways to Mapping Location, Association, and Pathway Responsivity

    Get PDF
    Here we discuss, how by applying chemical concepts to biological problems, methods have been developed to map spatiotemporal regulation of proteins and small-molecule modulation of proteome signaling responses. We outline why chemical-biology platforms are ideal for such purposes. We further discuss strengths and weaknesses of chemical-biology protocols, contrasting them against classical genetic and biochemical approaches. We make these evaluations based on three parameters: occupancy; functional information; and spatial restriction. We demonstrate how the specific choice of chemical reagent and experimental set-up unite to resolve biological problems. Potential improvements/extensions as well as specific controls that in our opinion are often overlooked or employed incorrectly are also considered. Finally, we discuss some of the latest emerging methods to illuminate how chemical-biology innovations provide a gateway toward information hitherto inaccessible by conventional genetic/biochemical means. Finally, we also caution against solely relying on chemical-biology strategies and urge the field to undertake orthogonal validations to ensure robustness of results

    Where Electrophile Signaling and Covalent Ligand–Target Mining Converge

    Get PDF
    Interests in learning how to engineer most effective covalent ligands, identify novel functional targets, and define precise mechanism-of-action are rapidly growing in both academia and pharmaceutical industries. We here illuminate the establishment of a multifunctional platform that offers new capabilities to logically engineer covalent ligands and dissect 'on-target' bioactivity with precise biological context and precision hitherto inaccessible. Broadly aimed at non-specialist readers, this opinion piece is aimed to stoke the interest of emerging chemists and biologists/bioengineers, but the underlying technological and conceptual topicality is anticipated to also appeal to experts leading ligand–target mining, validation, and -discovery research programs

    Bringing Functional Context to Emerging Proximity-mapping Proteomics Tools: Medicinal Chemistry and Chemical Biology Highlights

    No full text
    If one considers chemical-biology toolsets that have had the greatest impact on numerous fields of life sciences over the most recent years, proximity-labeling tools, such as APEX, and Bio-ID arguably lead the way. This article reflects upon the current state-of-the-art and discusses key limitations underlying these emerging approaches, in particular, the limited functional knowledge they provide in understanding local proteomes / interactomes. This limitation is directly linked to the use of non-biologically- or non-pharmaceutically-relevant reactive intermediates in the course of covalently labeling the local proteomes. As such, these methods cannot report on specific functions of localized protein players, nor can they scrutinize whether the specific functions of such proteins/interactomes can be directly manipulated by pharmacologically-relevant small-molecule ligands. The latest data hint that precision localized electrophile delivery concept ushers a means to address this limitation with high spatiotemporal resolution, and ultimately, in relevant live animals

    Empowering Global Chemical Biology at the Dawn of the New Decade

    No full text
    On January 22–24, 2020, scientific luminaries across the far-flung corners of chemical biology gathered in Geneva, Switzerland, to deliver their latest and greatest discoveries in the field. Generously supported by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF), our academic partners, and industrial and journal sponsors, this chemical biology symposium in our opinion will remain memorable for several years to come, not only because of the diversity in scientific topics delivered by our invited eminent speakers as detailed herein, but it is also one-of-a-kind conference which reflected multidimensional balance—balance in age and gender, across these speakers. Such a remarkable speaker line-up doubtless attracted >200 attendees from academia and industry in and around Switzerland and beyond, representing a huge swathe of subfields of science interfacing chemistry and biology. Poster presentations from students and postdocs further spotlighted the exciting diversity in the field: spanning biosynthesis, optochemical genetics, genetic code expansion, lipid chemical biology, redox perturbation, microfluidics screening, membrane signaling, immune modulation, DNA circuits, and synthetic and computational biology. This notable heterogeneity in scientific topics also went hand-in-hand with the diverse representations of student/postdoc trainees from 56 institutions covering 14 countries worldwide, allowing us to witness science as a truly global enterprise

    Weighing up the Selenocysteome Uncovers New Sec-rets

    No full text
    Challenging the paradigm of SECIS-dependent selenoprotein translation, in this issue of Cell Chemical Biology Guo et al. (2018) introduce a new selenoprotein profiling platform with which they identify novel selenoproteins apparently lacking SECIS. With increased interest in covalent targeting of reactive Sec residues in drug discovery, their method adds a valuable contribution toward expanding the druggable human proteome

    Redox Pathways in Chemical Toxicology

    No full text

    Electrophile Signaling and Emerging Immuno- and Neuro-modulatory Electrophilic Pharmaceuticals

    No full text
    With a lipid-rich environment and elevated oxygen consumption, the central nervous system (CNS) is subject to intricate regulation by lipid-derived electrophiles (LDEs). Investigations into oxidative damage and chronic LDE generation in neural disorders have spurred the development of tools that can detect and catalog the gamut of LDE-adducted proteins. Despite these advances, deconstructing the precise consequences of individual protein-specific LDE modifications remained largely impossible until recently. In this perspective, we first overview emerging toolsets that can decode electrophile-signaling events in a protein/context-specific manner, and how the accumulating mechanistic insights brought about by these tools have begun to offer new means to modulate pathways relevant to multiple sclerosis (MS). By surveying the latest data surrounding the blockbuster MS drug dimethyl fumarate that functions through LDE-signaling-like mechanisms, we further provide a vision for how chemical biology tools probing electrophile signaling may be leveraged toward novel interventions in CNS disease
    • …
    corecore