Structural Searching of Biosynthetic Enzymes to Predict Protein Targets of Natural Products
Author(s)
Sturm, Noe
Quinn, Ronald J
Kellenberger, Esther
Griffith University Author(s)
Year published
2018
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Recently, we have demonstrated that site comparison methodology using flavonoid biosynthetic enzymes as the query could automatically identify structural features common to different flavonoid-binding proteins, allowing for the identification of flavonoid targets such as protein kinases. With the aim of further validating the hypothesis that biosynthetic enzymes and therapeutic targets can contain a similar natural product imprint, we collected a set of 159 crystallographic structures representing 38 natural product biosynthetic enzymes by searching the Protein Databank. Each enzyme structure was used as a query to screen a ...
View more >Recently, we have demonstrated that site comparison methodology using flavonoid biosynthetic enzymes as the query could automatically identify structural features common to different flavonoid-binding proteins, allowing for the identification of flavonoid targets such as protein kinases. With the aim of further validating the hypothesis that biosynthetic enzymes and therapeutic targets can contain a similar natural product imprint, we collected a set of 159 crystallographic structures representing 38 natural product biosynthetic enzymes by searching the Protein Databank. Each enzyme structure was used as a query to screen a repository of approximately 10 000 ligandable sites by active site similarity. We report a full analysis of the screening results and highlight three retrospective examples where the natural product validates the method, thereby revealing novel structural relationships between natural product biosynthetic enzymes and putative protein targets of the natural product. From a prospective perspective, our work provides a list of up to 64 potential novel targets for 25 well-characterized natural products.
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View more >Recently, we have demonstrated that site comparison methodology using flavonoid biosynthetic enzymes as the query could automatically identify structural features common to different flavonoid-binding proteins, allowing for the identification of flavonoid targets such as protein kinases. With the aim of further validating the hypothesis that biosynthetic enzymes and therapeutic targets can contain a similar natural product imprint, we collected a set of 159 crystallographic structures representing 38 natural product biosynthetic enzymes by searching the Protein Databank. Each enzyme structure was used as a query to screen a repository of approximately 10 000 ligandable sites by active site similarity. We report a full analysis of the screening results and highlight three retrospective examples where the natural product validates the method, thereby revealing novel structural relationships between natural product biosynthetic enzymes and putative protein targets of the natural product. From a prospective perspective, our work provides a list of up to 64 potential novel targets for 25 well-characterized natural products.
View less >
Journal Title
Planta Medica
Volume
84
Issue
5
Subject
Plant biology
Traditional, complementary and integrative medicine
Traditional, complementary and integrative medicine not elsewhere classified
Pharmacology and pharmaceutical sciences