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Protein–Protein Interactions: A Simple Strategy to Identify Binding Sites and Peptide Antagonists
Authors:Annamaria Sandomenico  Simona M. Monti  Marco Sabatella  Antonia De Capua  Laura Tornatore  Nunzianna Doti  Francesca Viparelli  Nina A. Dathan  Carlo Pedone  Menotti Ruvo  Daniela Marasco
Affiliation:1. Istituto di Biostrutture e Bioimmagini (IBB), CNR, via Mezzocannone, 16, 80134, Napoli, Italy;2. Centro di Ricerca Interdipartimentale sui Biomateriali, Università di Napoli “Federico II”, P.le Tecchio, 80‐80125 Napoli, Italy;3. Dipartimento delle Scienze Biologiche, Università di Napoli Federico II, via Mezzocannone, 16, 80134, Napoli, Italy
Abstract:Secondary structure motifs and small protein domains can act as building blocks that are isolated and investigated to gain insights into protein global structure but can also modulate interactions with external partners. Most progress has been made in this field using synthetic peptides. Fragmentation of folded proteins by proteolytic enzymes that act preferentially on exposed and less structured sites can help to isolate shorter polypeptides with preserved secondary and tertiary structures that mimic the original protein architecture. Such molecules can be used as probes for structural studies and as tools for in vitro assays to select active fragments useful as agonists or antagonists of the original protein or as scaffolds for the design of more potent and selective ligands. This simple but effective proteolytic methodology has been successfully applied to determine antagonists of protein–protein interactions, allowing the identification of inhibitors with high efficacy and specificity. Here, we present several studies including the complex between phosphoprotein enriched in diabetes/phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes and phospholipase 1, believed to play a relevant role in the insulin resistance mechanism in phosphoprotein enriched in diabetes/phosphoprotein enriched in astrocytes‐overexpressing tissues, the self‐association of BCL10 caspase recruitment domain that mediates a protein oligomerization process responsible for NF‐κB activation and the self‐association of growth arrest and DNA damage‐inducible factor 45β, a major player of the endogenous NF‐κB‐mediated resistance to apoptosis.
Keywords:competition assays  mass spectrometry  proteolysis  synthetic peptides
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