In the field of tuberculosis, the challenge is to interpret genome information in the context of the host–pathogen interaction, and then translate the resulting knowledge into a new generation of drugs and vaccines with which to arm ourselves in the fight against this ancient disease. Structural genomics, the large-scale determination of protein structures, promises to provide many useful data for drug discovery. To date, 38 protein structures have been determined from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Most are those of proteins involved in intermediary metabolism and lipid metabolism. These structures will provide the opportunity to undertake structure-guided drug discovery programs in the search for new classes of antibiotics. Existing information will provide spin-offs for future applications, but the way ahead is still arduous because it is difficult to obtain sufficient yields of the functionally active gene products, despite numerous efforts to optimize the prokaryotic expression systems. More protein candidates, responsible for virulence, intracellular survival, transcriptional regulation or drug resistance, must be characterized to develop new treatments for tuberculosis.

Techniques and Applications: The heterologous expression of Mycobacterium tuberculosis genes is an uphill road.

BELLINZONI, MARCO;RICCARDI, GIOVANNA
2003-01-01

Abstract

In the field of tuberculosis, the challenge is to interpret genome information in the context of the host–pathogen interaction, and then translate the resulting knowledge into a new generation of drugs and vaccines with which to arm ourselves in the fight against this ancient disease. Structural genomics, the large-scale determination of protein structures, promises to provide many useful data for drug discovery. To date, 38 protein structures have been determined from Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Most are those of proteins involved in intermediary metabolism and lipid metabolism. These structures will provide the opportunity to undertake structure-guided drug discovery programs in the search for new classes of antibiotics. Existing information will provide spin-offs for future applications, but the way ahead is still arduous because it is difficult to obtain sufficient yields of the functionally active gene products, despite numerous efforts to optimize the prokaryotic expression systems. More protein candidates, responsible for virulence, intracellular survival, transcriptional regulation or drug resistance, must be characterized to develop new treatments for tuberculosis.
2003
Microbiology covers the biology and biochemistry of microorganisms, bacterial, viral, and parasitic, as well as the medical implications and treatments of the subset of these organisms known to cause disease in humans and/or animals. Biotechnology applications of microorganisms for basic science or clinical use are also covered. Resources that emphasize immune response to pathogens and its modulation by clinical intervention are excluded and are covered in the Immunology category.
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
Inglese
Internazionale
STAMPA
11
8
351
358
Review
Mycobacterium tuberculosis; heterologous expression; NAD
2
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
262
Bellinzoni, Marco; Riccardi, Giovanna
1 Contributo su Rivista::1.1 Articolo in rivista
none
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11571/132635
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