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Journal ArticleDOI

Inhibition of protein-protein interactions in Plasmodium falciparum: future drug targets.

TLDR
It is proposed that the inhibition of protein-protein interactions by peptides, peptidomimetics or small-molecule inhibitors that interfere with binding domains can contribute to defining new potential drug targets.
Abstract
The rapid development by malaria parasites of resistance to almost all the chemotherapeutic agents so far used for their control means that constant efforts to develop new drugs are necessary. In this review, we propose that the exploration of protein-protein interactions as a new strategy to identify antimalarial drug targets is an attractive and a promising area of research. Nevertheless, one of the most important criteria is that the targeted gene should encode an essential protein within a complex that is able to affect parasite survival. Recently, our research on the biology of Plasmodium falciparum allowed us to identify the interaction of Protein Phosphatase type 1 and actin with two essential partners, PfLRR1 and PfLRR7 respectively, both of which belong to the Leucine Rich Repeat (LRR) protein family. LRR-containing proteins are composed of several consensus LRR motifs LXLXXNXL (where X is any amino acid) that provide sites for the assembly of protein interactions. The LRR combines structural versatility, adaptability and more importantly a high degree of interaction specificity. In addition, it has been shown that a single mutation in a particular LRR motif abolishes the protein-protein interaction and contributes to the expression of severe pathology in humans. This clearly infers that blocking the interaction related to 'hot spots' of LRR motifs can be considered as good targets to block parasite growth and development. Thus, the inhibition of protein-protein interactions by peptides, peptidomimetics or small-molecule inhibitors that interfere with binding domains can contribute to defining new potential drug targets.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Strategies for new and improved vaccines against ticks and tick‐borne diseases

TL;DR: This review addresses different approaches and strategies used for the discovery of protective antigens, including focusing on relevant tick biological functions and proteins, reverse genetics, vaccinomics and tick protein evolution and interactomics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Design of Decorin-Based Peptides That Bind to Collagen I and their Potential as Adhesion Moieties in Biomaterials

TL;DR: The peptide with the highest binding affinity for collagen I, LHERHLNNN, served to slow down the diffusion of a conjugated dye in a collagen gel, while its dimer could physically crosslink collagen, thereby enhancing the elastic modulus of the gel by one order of magnitude.
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Unravelling the Neospora caninum secretome through the secreted fraction (ESA) and quantification of the discharged tachyzoite using high-resolution mass spectrometry-based proteomics

TL;DR: The comparison between the protein abundances in ESA and their measure in the discharged tachyzoite allowed for a more precise identification of the most likely secreted proteins, helping to guide the selection of targets to be investigated against Neospora caninum and other Apicomplexan organisms.
Journal ArticleDOI

Smart surface for elution of protein-protein bound particles: nanonewton dielectrophoretic forces using atomic layer deposited oxides.

TL;DR: The significantly enhanced switching performance presented in this work shows orders of magnitude of improvement in on-to-off ratio and switching response time, without any need for chemical eluting agents, as compared to the previous work.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interactomics and tick vaccine development: new directions for the control of tick-borne diseases.

TL;DR: In the near future, the combination of interactomics with other omics approaches such as transcriptomics, proteomics, metabolomics, and regulomics together with intelligent Big Data analytic techniques will improve the high throughput discovery and characterization of vaccine protective antigens for the prevention and control of TBDs.
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