City
Epaper

New method of protein identification aids in drug development: Study

By ANI | Published: June 14, 2023 2:55 PM

Gothenburg [Sweden], June 14 : Depending on the type of cell, all living cells contain proteins with different functions. ...

Open in App

Gothenburg [Sweden], June 14 : Depending on the type of cell, all living cells contain proteins with different functions. The researchers at the University of Gothenburg have figured out a technique to recognise proteins even without looking at their structure. Their method is faster and easier as compared to previous ones.

Currently, the general view is that each protein's structure is what controls its function in cells. The atomic sequences, meaning how the atoms are arranged in the proteins, create the protein's structure and shape. But there are many proteins that lack a well-defined structure.

Researcher Gergely Katona has developed a new method where proteins are scanned based on the number of amino acids (or the number of different atoms) they contain in order to identify them and their function instead of identifying them based on their structure. With this scanning method, the researchers were able to predict relatively reliably which combination of amino acids is needed to bind to the protein survivin. The outcome was a reliability of about 80 per cent, which is better than when you use the protein's primary structures for identification. The results are now published in the scientific journal iScience.

The structure of less importance

Several thousand peptides containing 15 amino acids were tested and the researchers were able to conclude that it was the amino acid content that affected their binding to survivin, while the structure of the peptides had almost no significance.

"Simple counting things has often been a successful method in science. Here we counted the number of amino acids and were able to predict the function of the protein surprisingly well," says Gergely Katona.

The researchers see advantages with this method of scanning proteins. Machine learning (AI) also speeds up the process of linking the number and type of amino acids to a certain function. This in turn means that the development of new biological drugs can be accelerated.

In the researchers' experiments with this new scanning method, a completely new function of the protein survivin was also discovered. This protein is mainly prominent in embryo cells and prevents programmed cell death. But in cancerous tumours, survivin becomes unregulated and thus facilitates the development of the cancer.

Useful in cancer research

The researchers have now seen that survivin directly influences another protein, PRC2, which switches off and on various functions in the DNA in the cell, like a kind of programming. Dysfunctional PRC2 can also be linked to various forms of cancer. Today's cancer drugs target both survivin and PRC2, but with the newly discovered link between survivin and PRC2, the drugs may need to be designed differently to avoid serious side effects.

"We saw that if we suppressed the level of survivin, activity in PRC2 increased. The dream for pharmaceutical companies is to find the right targets in the atomic sequences to be able to balance the two proteins," says Gergely Katona.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Gergely KatonaThe University Of GothenburgUniversity Of GothenburgUniversity of gothenburg university
Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyStudy finds fish farms can generate biogas

TechnologyBiogas can be produced by fish farms: Study

Technology20 species of sea lettuce are present in Baltic and Scandinavian coasts: Research

HealthDiabetes, weight loss drug may help cut alcohol dependence in half

HealthBaby born from uterus transplanted & implanted via robot in world first

Technology Realted Stories

TechnologySwapping meat with veggies, fruits can lower carbon emissions by a quarter: Study

TechnologySlowly killing us: Zerodha's Nithin Kamath on sugar content, adulteration in food items

TechnologyGoogle introduces new AI features in its Chromebook Plus laptops

TechnologyNew WHO report calls for increasing investments in adolescent well-being

TechnologySBICAP Ventures invests in climate-tech firm Solinas to boost sanitation efforts