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Docking Study of Ligands into the Colchicine Binding Site of Tubulin
39
Citations
14
References
2004
Year
Protein AssemblyMolecular BiologyCytoskeletonChemical BiologyMedicinal ChemistryProtein FoldingAnti-cancer AgentMitotic SpindleMulti-protein AssemblyProtein ChemistryBiochemistryColchicine Binding SiteMacromolecular MachineBiomolecular InteractionTumor TargetingPharmacologyCell BiologyMolecular DockingDrug TargetingNatural SciencesSpindle PoisonsTubulin DimerMedicineDrug Discovery
Cancer is a major cause of mortality in developed countries, following only cardiovascular diseases. Death of cancerous cells can be achieved by stopping mitosis and the antimitotic class of drugs formed by the spindle poisons can be used for this purpose. Their role is to disorganize the mitotic spindle by targeting its main constituent, the microtubules, themselves made of heterodimers of alpha and beta-tubulin. They disrupt the dynamics of the microtubules either by stabilizing them, as do paclitaxel or epothilones, or destabilizing them, as do colchicine. The binding site of colchicine seems to lie between the two units of the tubulin dimer. Here, we report on the characterization of this site by the docking of a series of reference compounds, and the subsequent docking of ligands prepared in our laboratory.
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