AI Article Synopsis

  • Peptides, such as cyclooligopeptides and depsipeptides from cyanobacteria, show promising characteristics for drug discovery due to their unique structural properties and diverse pharmacological activities.
  • The study reviews the natural sources, chemical properties, and biological profiles of cyanobacteria-derived thiazoline-based polypeptides (CTBCs), emphasizing their role as potential drug targets and their advantages over traditional small molecules.
  • CTBCs demonstrate enhanced stability and binding to targets, suggesting they could address unmet medical needs and serve as valuable compounds in the development of new therapeutics.

Article Abstract

Background: Peptides and peptide-based therapeutics are biomolecules that demarcate a significant chemical space to bridge small molecules with biological therapeutics, such as antibodies, recombinant proteins, and protein domains.

Introduction: Cyclooligopeptides and depsipeptides, particularly cyanobacteria-derived thiazoline-based polypeptides (CTBCs), exhibit a wide array of pharmacological activities due to their unique structural features and interesting bioactions, which furnish them as promising leads for drug discovery.

Methods: In the present study, we comprehensively review the natural sources, distinguishing chemistries, and pertinent bioprofiles of CTBCs. We analyze their structural peculiarities counting the mode of actions for biological portrayals which render CTBCs as indispensable sources for emergence of prospective peptide-based therapeutics. In this milieu, metal organic frameworks and their biomedical applications are also briefly discussed. To boot, the challenges, approaches, and clinical status of peptide-based therapeutics are conferred.

Results: Based on these analyses, CTBCs can be appraised as ideal drug targets that have always remained a challenge for traditional small molecules, like those involved in protein- protein interactions or to be developed as potential cancer-targeting nanomaterials. Cyclization-induced reduced conformational freedom of these cyclooligopeptides contribute to improved metabolic stability and binding affinity to their molecular targets. Clinical success of several cyclic peptides provokes the large library-screening and synthesis of natural product-like cyclic peptides to address the unmet medical needs.

Conclusion: CTBCs can be considered as the most promising lead compounds for drug discovery. Adopting the amalgamation of advanced biological and biopharmaceutical strategies might endure these cyclopeptides to be prospective biomolecules for futuristic therapeutic applications in the coming times.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2174/0929867328666210526095436DOI Listing

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