Targeting Protein–Protein Interactions for Drug Discovery provides a systematic and comprehensive overview of protein-protein interactions (PPIs), reviewing foundational concepts, advanced methodologies, and emerging therapeutic strategies, reflecting the multidisciplinary nature of PPI research.
This book discusses computational methods for predicting PPI structures, with a special emphasis on protein docking and deep learning-based approaches, diverse chemical scaffolds for PPI modulation, including foldamers as inhibitors of aberrant PPIs and sulfonyl-γ-AApeptides as novel modulators, and the development and application of stapled peptides as modulators of intracellular PPIs, offering enhanced stability, binding affinity, and cellular permeability.
Readers will also find information on cyclic peptides, focusing on their unique conformational stabilization and therapeutic potential across a range of diseases, small molecule inhibitors targeting BCL-family proteins, revealing their potential in cancer therapy, molecular glues as activators for PPIs, categorized into degraders, stabilizers, and inhibitors based on their biological effects, and the targeting of the APC–Asef interaction for drug discovery in colorectal cancer therapy, offering a case study of specificity and clinical relevance.
Targeting Protein–Protein Interactions for Drug Discovery explores sample topics including:
Exploring both classical and novel approaches to PPI characterization and modulation, Targeting Protein–Protein Interactions for Drug Discovery offers a comprehensive reference for researchers aiming to unlock the therapeutic potential of PPIs along with educators and students engaged in the study of cellular mechanisms, drug discovery, and biotechnology.
Jian Zhang is a Distinguished Professor and Doctoral Supervisor at School of Medicine, Shanghai Jiao Tong University, China. He is also the Director of the Medicinal Bioinformatics Center. His fields of research include first-in-class drug design and chemical biology, mainly pertaining to protein-protein interactions and allostery and their application in drug discovery. He received a BM degree in Pharmacology from Peking University and a PhD from Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica, Chinese Academy of Sciences.