Publication | Closed Access
Controlling Signal Transduction with Synthetic Ligands
845
Citations
43
References
1993
Year
EngineeringSynthetic CircuitCellular PhysiologyIntracellular OligomerizationSignaling PathwayCell SignalingCell TraffickingSynthetic LigandsReceptor (Biochemistry)Non-peptide LigandCell BiologyBiomolecular EngineeringDrug TargetingSignal TransductionSynthetic BiologyIntracellular TraffickingSystems BiologyMedicineSignal Transduction PathwayDrug Discovery
Dimerization and oligomerization are general biological control mechanisms contributing to the activation of cell membrane receptors, transcription factors, vesicle fusion proteins, and other classes of intra- and extracellular proteins. Cell permeable, synthetic ligands were devised that can be used to control the intracellular oligomerization of specific proteins. To demonstrate their utility, these ligands were used to induce intracellular oligomerization of cell surface receptors that lacked their transmembrane and extracellular regions but contained intracellular signaling domains. Addition of these ligands to cells in culture resulted in signal transmission and specific target gene activation. Monomeric forms of the ligands blocked the pathway. This method of ligand-regulated activation and termination of signaling pathways has the potential to be applied wherever precise control of a signal transduction pathway is desired.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1