Revisão Revisado por pares

Coiled-coils: stability, specificity, and drug delivery potential

2002; Elsevier BV; Volume: 54; Issue: 8 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/s0169-409x(02)00058-3

ISSN

1872-8294

Autores

Y. Bruce Yu,

Tópico(s)

Protein Structure and Dynamics

Resumo

The coiled-coil is a ubiquitous protein folding and assembly motif made of α-helices wrapping around each other forming a supercoil. The sequences of coiled-coils are made of seven-residue repeats, called heptads, and thus are polymer-like. Due to its simplicity and regularity, the coiled-coil is the most extensively studied protein motif. In this review, results on coiled-coil stability and specificity from structural and biophysical studies are summarized. It is pointed out that the primary sequences of coiled-coils over specify the secondary structure but under specify the tertiary/quaternary structure. This leads to two unique features of coiled-coil structure: linkage between stability and specificity and decoupling of secondary and tertiary/quaternary structural specificity. This is followed by a discussion of the potential of coiled-coils as drug delivery vehicles, particularly the prospect in two-staged pretargeted delivery. Such potentials are intimately related to the unique structural features of coiled-coils. The aim of this review is to illustrate how knowledge on protein stability and specificity can be used in the de novo design of peptide-based drug delivery vehicles with well-defined structure and interaction features.

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