• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 2
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 4
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Méthodes RMN pour la découverte de nouveaux ligands ciblant les récepteurs couplés aux protéines G / NMR methods for G-protein coupled receptors drug discovery

Raingeval, Claire 23 October 2019 (has links)
Les récepteurs couplés aux protéines G (RCPGs), constituent la plus grande famille de protéines membranaires dans le génome humain. Les RCPGs sont des protéines de signalisation, qui exercent leur action à la surface des cellules, en réponse à une grande variété de stimuli extérieurs. Ils jouent un rôle primordial dans de nombreuses fonctions physiologiques et sont donc impliqués dans une multitude de pathologies comme les maladies cardiovasculaires, métaboliques, neurodégénératives, psychiatriques et oncologiques. L'attribution du prix Nobel de chimie 2012 aux professeurs Robert Lefkowitz et Brian Kobilka pour leurs travaux et avancées spectaculaires dans le champ de recherches des RCPGs, souligne encore leur importance. Les RCPGs constituent également la plus importante cible thérapeutique, avec 30% des médicaments actuellement disponibles sur le marché qui exercent leur action via un RCPG. Cependant, la découverte de nouveaux ligands reste un chalenge. Le but est de développer des approches basées sur la RMN à l’état liquide, qui auront un impact positif sur la recherche de ligand de RCPGs, grâce à l’étude et la caractérisation de récepteur pleine taille, solubilisés en micelles de détergents ou enchâssés en bicouches lipidiques natives / G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest class of membrane proteins in the human genome. GPCRs act as cell surface signalling proteins and respond to a variety of external signals. They play a pivotal role in many physiological functions and are therefore associated with a multitude of diseases, including cardiovascular, metabolic, neurodegenerative, psychiatric, and oncologic diseases. The 2012 noble Prize in Chemistry was awarded jointly to Robert J. Lefkowitz and Brian K. Kobilka for studies of GPCRs, highlighting the importance of this protein superfamily. GPCRs constitute also the most important family of drug targets in the human body, with 30% of current drugs acting on GPCRs. However, drug discovery targeting GPCRs remains difficult, owing to the restricted structural information on GPCRs related to the instability of these proteins when isolated from their cell membrane environments. There is also a lack of knowledge for the structural and functional consequences of the interactions of small-molecule compounds with GPCR. The aim is to develop methods to study and characterize a full GPCR solubilized in detergents or in native lipid bilayers, both in its free form and in small molecule bound forms, using liquid-state NMR experiments. The aim is to develop NMR-based approaches that will strongly impact the structure-based drug discovery process for the GPCR family
2

Progress of Weak Affinity Chromatography as a Tool in Drug Development

Meiby, Elinor January 2013 (has links)
Weak Affinity Chromatography (WAC) is a technology that was developed to analyse weak (KD > 10-5 M) although selective interactions between biomolecules. The focus of this thesis was to develop this method for various applications in the drug development process.   Fragment Based Drug Discovery is a new approach in finding new small molecular drugs. Here, relatively small libraries (a few hundreds to a few thousands of compounds) of fragments (150 – 300 Da) are screened against the target. Fragment hits are then developed into lead molecules by linking, growing or merging fragments binding to different locations of the protein’s active site. However, due to the weakly binding nature of fragments, methods that are able to detect very weak binding events are needed. In this thesis, WAC is presented as a new robust and highly reproducible technology for fragment screening. The technology is demonstrated against a number of different protein targets – proteases, kinases, chaperones and protein-protein interaction (PPI) targets. Comparison of data from fragment screening of 111 fragments by WAC and other more established technologies for fragment screening, such as surface plasmon resonance (SPR) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), validates WAC as a screening technology. It also points at the importance of performing fragment screening by multiple methods as they complement each other.   Other applications of WAC in drug development are also presented. The method can be used for chiral separations of racemic mixtures during fragment screening, which enables affinity measurements of individual enantiomers binding to the target of interest. Further, analysis of crude reaction mixtures is shown. By these procedures, the affinity of the product can be assessed directly after synthesis without any time-consuming purification steps. In addition, a high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system for highly efficient drug partition studies was developed by stable immobilization of lipid bilayer disks – lipodisks – on a high performance silica support material. These lipodisks are recognized model membranes for drug partition studies. A WAC system with incorporated membrane proteins into immobilized lipodisks has also been produced and evaluated with the ultimate objective to study affinity interactions between ligands and membrane proteins. / Ett läkemedel utövar sin funktion genom att påverka aktiviteten hos ett protein i kroppen då det binder till dess aktiva säte. Förändringen i aktivitet leder till fysiologiska förändringar i kroppen beroende på vilken funktion proteinet har. Med läkemedelsmolekyl avses här en liten organisk molekyl. Fragment-baserad läkemedelsutveckling är en ny metod for att ta fram nya läkemedel. Metoden fungerar genom att man bygger läkemedelsmolekyler utifrån mindre fragment som binder till målproteinet. Fragmenten hittar man genom att screena hela bibliotek av olika fragment mot samma målprotein för att urskilja de som binder till proteinets aktiva säte. Fördelen med den här metoden är bl. a. att med mindre molekyler som utgångspunkt kan en större del av antalet möjliga kombinationer av atomer representeras med ett mindre antal fragment än för större molekyler. Normalt utgörs ett fragmentbibliotek enbart av några hundra till några tusen substanser. Eftersom fragmenten är små har de få interaktionspunker och binder relativt svagt. De svaga bindningarna är svåra att se och mycket känsliga metoder behövs.   Svagaffinitetskromatografi är en vätskekromatografisk metod som utvecklades för att studera svaga men mycket selektiva bindningar mellan biomolekyler. Den här avhandlingen syftar till att utveckla metoden för olika användningsområden inom läkemedelsutveckling, främst som en ny metod för fragment-screening. Här mäter man interaktionen mellan ett protein och ett fragment. Proteinet kopplas till ett material som sedan packas i en kolonn i formen av en cylinder. När provet pumpas igenom kolonnen kommer de analyter med affinitet till proteinets aktiva säte att fördröjas på kolonnen i relation till hur starkt de interagerar med målproteinet.   I den här avhandlingen presenteras fragment-screening med svagaffinitetskromatografi gentemot ett antal olika typer av målproteiner. Resultatet överensstämmer väl med andra metoder för fragment-screening. Analys av reaktionsblandningar med svagaffinitetskromatografi demonstreras också. Därmed kan bindningen mellan en produkt i en reaktionsblandning och ett målprotein mätas direkt utan föregående uppreningssteg av reaktionsblandningen. Lipodiskar är små diskformade modellmembran som kan användas för att bl. a. mäta hur effektivt läkemedlet tas upp i kroppen vid behandling. Ett system med immobiliserade lipodiskar i en kolonn utvecklades med det framtida målet att kunna arbeta med membranproteiner med svagaffinitetskromatografi.   Detta arbete utgör en del i att utveckla svagaffinitetskromatografi som en lättillgänglig och relativt billig metod för användning inom industrin och akademin för läkemedelsutveckling.
3

Introducing weak affinity chromatography to drug discovery with focus on fragment screening

Duong-Thi, Minh-Dao January 2013 (has links)
Fragment-based drug discovery is an emerging process that has gained popularity in recent years. The process starts from small molecules called fragments. One major step in fragment-based drug discovery is fragment screening, which is a strategy to screen libraries of small molecules to find hits. The strategy in theory is more efficient than traditional high-throughput screening that works with larger molecules. As fragments intrinsically possess weak affinity to a target, detection techniques of high sensitivity to affinity are required for fragment screening. Furthermore, the use of different screening methods is necessary to improve the likelihood of success in finding suitable fragments. Since no single method can work for all types of screening, there is a demand for new techniques. The aim of this thesis is to introduce weak affinity chromatography (WAC) as a novel technique for fragment screening. WAC is, as the name suggests, an affinity-based liquid chromatographic technique that separates compounds based on their different weak affinities to an immobilized target. The higher affinity a compound has towards the target, the longer it remains in the separation unit, and this will be expressed as a longer retention time. The affinity measure and ranking of affinity can be achieved by processing the obtained retention times of analyzed compounds. In this thesis, WAC is studied for fragment screening on two platforms. The first system comprised a 24-channel affinity cartridge that works in cooperation with an eight-needle autosampler and 24 parallel UV detector units. The second system was a standard analytical LC-MS platform that is connected to an affinity column, generally called WAC-MS or affinity LC-MS. The evaluation criteria in studying WAC for fragment screening using these platforms were throughput, affinity determination and ranking, specificity, operational platform characteristics and consumption of target protein and sample. The model target proteins were bovine serum albumin for the first platform, thrombin and trypsin for the latter. Screened fragments were either small molecule drugs, a thrombin-directed collection of compounds, or a general-purpose fragment library. To evaluate WAC for early stages of fragment elaboration, diastereomeric mixtures from a thrombin-directed synthesis project were screened. Although both analytical platforms can be used for fragment screening, WAC-MS shows more useful features due to easy access to the screening platform, higher throughput and ability to analyze mixtures. Affinity data from WAC are in good correlation with IC50 values from enzyme assay experiments. The possibility to distinguish specific from non- specific interactions plays an important role in the interpretation of WAC results. In this thesis, this was achieved by inhibiting the active site of the target protein to measure off-site interactions. WAC proves to be a sensitive, robust, moderate in cost and easy to access technique for fragment screening, and can also be useful in the early stages of fragment evolution. In conclusion, this thesis has demonstrated the proof of principle of using WAC as a new tool to monitor affinity and to select hits in fragment-based drug discovery. This thesis has indicated the primary possibilities, advantages as well as the limitations of WAC in fragment screening procedures.  In the future, WAC should be evaluated on other targets and fragment libraries in order to realize more fully the potential of the technology.
4

Structural studies to inform antimicrobial drug discovery and the basis of immunity against T6 effectors

O'Rourke, Patrick January 2013 (has links)
Work presented in this thesis is in two parts. Part one: The X-ray crystal structures of potential antimicrobial drug targets. The protein IspF (2C-methyl-D-erythritol-2,4-cyclodiphosphate synthase, EC: 4.6.1.12) from two pathogens (Burkholderia cenocepacia and Plasmodium falciparum) has been investigated. IspF is an enzyme of isoprenoid-precursor biosynthesis and is considered to be a potential drug target. The results of structural and fragment-screening efforts presented here inform early stage drug discovery efforts. The structure of the PabC protein (4-amino-4-deoxychorismate lyase, EC: 4.1.3.38) from the Gram-negative pathogen Pseudomonas aeruginosa was also determined. PabC is involved in the production of para-aminobenzoic acid on the path to folate. Comparisons with previously solved PabC structures identified a spatially conserved tyrosine residue in the active site and suggest that a re-evaluation of a published mechanism is warranted. Part two: Immunity proteins in the Gram-negative Type VI secretion system. The X-ray crystal structures of the proteins Rap1a and Rap2a from Serratia marcescens, inhibitors of the peptidoglycan amidase toxins secreted by some Gram-negative bacteria employing the Type VI secretion pathway, were determined by molecular replacement and analysed.

Page generated in 0.1209 seconds