2 results match your criteria: "Oregon Translational Research and Drug Development Institute[Affiliation]"

Transitioning pharmacoperones to therapeutic use: in vivo proof-of-principle and design of high throughput screens.

Pharmacol Res

May 2014

Department of Internal Medicine, Texas Tech University Health Science Center, 3601 4th Street, Lubbock, TX 79430, United States; Department of Cell Biology, Texas Tech University Health Science Center, 3601 4th Street, Lubbock, TX 79430, United States.

A pharmacoperone (from "pharmacological chaperone") is a small molecule that enters cells and serves as molecular scaffolding in order to cause otherwise-misfolded mutant proteins to fold and route correctly within the cell. Pharmacoperones have broad therapeutic applicability since a large number of diseases have their genesis in the misfolding of proteins and resultant misrouting within the cell. Misrouting may result in loss-of-function and, potentially, the accumulation of defective mutants in cellular compartments.

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Mutations cause protein folding defects that result in cellular misrouting of otherwise functional proteins. Such mutations are responsible for a wide range of disease states, especially among G-protein coupled receptors. Drugs which serve as chemical templates and promote the proper folding of these proteins are valuable therapeutic molecules since they return functional proteins to the proper site of action.

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