The interactions of small peptides with biological membranes is central to a number of biological processes. In contrast to soluble proteins there is comparatively little information available about ligandreceptor interactions that occur at membrane surfaces. The biophysical environment of a membrane is considerably different from the isotropic extracellular medium. It is therefore desirable to investigate membrane proteins and their binding specificity directly in living cells. The integrin aIIbb3 is the most abundant platelet cell surface glycoprotein and plays a key role in adhesion of platelet to protein-coated surfaces and platelet/platelet aggregation. Therefore, aIIbb3 receptor is an excellent target for drug design and delivery. The ligands are cyclic pentapeptide mimics incorporating stereoisomeric 5,6- and 5,7-fused bicyclic lactams and the tripeptide sequence Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)[1], a common amino acid motif found in a number of adhesive proteins. In order to study these binding processes at molecular level, we used trNOE experiments directly on whole human platelets.[2] Conformational properties of the free and bound mimics are investigated by computational and NMR studies. Utilizing structural information by NMR tr-NOE experiments and docking studies, we have discovered a new higher affinity aIIbb3 ligand, which is able to inhibit the adhesion of platelets.

Binding of RGD-peptide mimics to intact human platelets : an NMR study / D. Potenza, L. Belvisi, F. Vasile, M. Civera, L. Manzoni. ((Intervento presentato al convegno Meeting "Magnetic resonance in the life sciences: What's New" tenutosi a Montecatini, Italia nel 2008.

Binding of RGD-peptide mimics to intact human platelets : an NMR study

D. Potenza
Primo
;
L. Belvisi
Secondo
;
F. Vasile;M. Civera
Penultimo
;
2008

Abstract

The interactions of small peptides with biological membranes is central to a number of biological processes. In contrast to soluble proteins there is comparatively little information available about ligandreceptor interactions that occur at membrane surfaces. The biophysical environment of a membrane is considerably different from the isotropic extracellular medium. It is therefore desirable to investigate membrane proteins and their binding specificity directly in living cells. The integrin aIIbb3 is the most abundant platelet cell surface glycoprotein and plays a key role in adhesion of platelet to protein-coated surfaces and platelet/platelet aggregation. Therefore, aIIbb3 receptor is an excellent target for drug design and delivery. The ligands are cyclic pentapeptide mimics incorporating stereoisomeric 5,6- and 5,7-fused bicyclic lactams and the tripeptide sequence Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD)[1], a common amino acid motif found in a number of adhesive proteins. In order to study these binding processes at molecular level, we used trNOE experiments directly on whole human platelets.[2] Conformational properties of the free and bound mimics are investigated by computational and NMR studies. Utilizing structural information by NMR tr-NOE experiments and docking studies, we have discovered a new higher affinity aIIbb3 ligand, which is able to inhibit the adhesion of platelets.
English
2008
NMR ; Human platelet ; ligand-protein interaction
Settore CHIM/06 - Chimica Organica
Poster
Intervento inviato
Nessuno
Meeting "Magnetic resonance in the life sciences: What's New"
Montecatini, Italia
2008
Convegno nazionale
D. Potenza, L. Belvisi, F. Vasile, M. Civera, L. Manzoni
Binding of RGD-peptide mimics to intact human platelets : an NMR study / D. Potenza, L. Belvisi, F. Vasile, M. Civera, L. Manzoni. ((Intervento presentato al convegno Meeting "Magnetic resonance in the life sciences: What's New" tenutosi a Montecatini, Italia nel 2008.
Prodotti della ricerca::14 - Intervento a convegno non pubblicato
info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject
none
Conference Object
5
File in questo prodotto:
Non ci sono file associati a questo prodotto.
Pubblicazioni consigliate

I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/147802
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus ND
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? ND
social impact