Volume 3, Issue 10 pp. 1670-1686
Invited Paper
Free Access

Protein crystallography and infectious diseases

Christophe L.M.J. Verlinde

Christophe L.M.J. Verlinde

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Ethan A. Merritt

Ethan A. Merritt

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Focco Van Den Akker

Focco Van Den Akker

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Hidong Kim

Hidong Kim

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Ingeborg Feil

Ingeborg Feil

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Luis F. Delboni

Luis F. Delboni

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Shekhar C. Mande

Shekhar C. Mande

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Steve Sarfaty

Steve Sarfaty

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Philip H. Petra

Philip H. Petra

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

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Wim G.J. Hol

Corresponding Author

Wim G.J. Hol

Departments of Biological Structure and Biochemistry, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle Washington 98195

Department of Biological Structure, Biomolecular Structure Program and Howard Hughes Medical Institute, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington 98195Search for more papers by this author
First published: October 1994
Citations: 38

Abstract

The current rapid growth in the number of known 3-dimensional protein structures is producing a database of structures that is increasingly useful as a starting point for the development of new medically relevant molecules such as drugs, therapeutic proteins, and vaccines. This development is beautifully illustrated in the recent book, Protein structure: New approaches to disease and therapy (Perutz, 1992). There is a great and growing promise for the design of molecules for the treatment or prevention of a wide variety of diseases, an endeavor made possible by the insights derived from the structure and function of crucial proteins from pathogenic organisms and from man.

We present here 2 illustrations of structure-based drug design. The first is the prospect of developing antitrypanosomal drugs based on crystallographic, ligand-binding, and molecular modeling studies of glycolytic glycosomal enzymes from Trypanosomatidae. These unicellular organisms are responsible for several tropical diseases, including African and American trypanosomiases, as well as various forms of leishmaniasis. Because the target enzymes are also present in the human host, this project is a pioneering study in selective design. The second illustrative case is the prospect of designing anti-cholera drugs based on detailed analysis of the structure of cholera toxin and the closely related Escherichia coli heat-labile enterotoxin. Such potential drugs can be targeted either at inhibiting the toxin's receptor binding site or at blocking the toxin's intracellular catalytic activity.

Study of the Vibrio cholerae and E. coli toxins serves at the same time as an example of a general approach to structure-based vaccine design. These toxins exhibit a remarkable ability to stimulate the mucosal immune system, and early results have suggested that this property can be maintained by engineered fusion proteins based on the native toxin structure. The challenge is thus to incorporate selected epitopes from foreign pathogens into the native framework of the toxin such that crucial features of both the epitope and the toxin are maintained. That is, the modified toxin must continue to evoke a strong mucosal immune response, and this response must be directed against an epitope conformation characteristic of the original pathogen.

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