Litcius/Paper detail

Drug discovery by targeting the protein–protein interactions involved in autophagy

Honggang Xiang, Mi Zhou, Yan Li, Lu Zhou, Renxiao Wang

2023Acta Pharmaceutica Sinica B29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Autophagy is a cellular process in which proteins and organelles are engulfed in autophagosomal vesicles and transported to the lysosome/vacuole for degradation. Protein-protein interactions (PPIs) play a crucial role at many stages of autophagy, which present formidable but attainable targets for autophagy regulation. Moreover, selective regulation of PPIs tends to have a lower risk in causing undesired off-target effects in the context of a complicated biological network. Thus, small-molecule regulators, including peptides and peptidomimetics, targeting the critical PPIs involved in autophagy provide a new opportunity for innovative drug discovery. This article provides general background knowledge of the critical PPIs involved in autophagy and reviews a range of successful attempts on discovering regulators targeting those PPIs. Successful strategies and existing limitations in this field are also discussed.

Topics & Concepts

AutophagyDrug discoveryDrugProtein–protein interactionComputational biologyChemistryCell biologyPharmacologyMedicineBiologyBiochemistryApoptosisAutophagy in Disease and TherapyClick Chemistry and ApplicationsCRISPR and Genetic Engineering
Drug discovery by targeting the protein–protein interactions involved in autophagy | Litcius