Journal News

Proteomics study isolates drug targets

Oluwadamilola “Dami” Oke
March 12, 2024

Target identification is a major stage of early drug development — the point when researchers identify a biological element implicated in a disease that can be regulated by a therapeutic agent. 

One research team in Germany has recently focused on myeloid-derived suppressor cells, or MDSCs, which are blood cells that are not fully differentiated. These cells suppress immune cell activities and promote cancer, infection, and inflammatory diseases. By screening MDSCs from mice, the researchers took the first step in identifying potential targets that can modulate MDSC activity.

Protein Data Bank
Acylphosphatase 1 (ACYP1), one of the potential drug target proteins identified for attacking myeloid-derived suppressor cells.

Johannes Krumm, a scientist at OmicScouts GmbH, and Bernhard Küster, a professor at the Technical University of Munich, collaborated with the pharmaceutical firm Merck & Co. on the study. They recently published their findings in the journal Molecular & Cellular Proteomics.

The research team used high throughput screening, a technique that allowed them to cross-test large quantities of compounds against several factors to identify potential drug targets. The screening narrowed the potential targets from 20,818 compounds in the MDSC mice cells to 104 compounds that also modulated MDSC activity in human cells.

Krumm and Küster both hope that this paper “motivates further research groups and biotech/pharma companies to consider proteomics as a tool for drug discovery,” they wrote in an email.

Proteomics combines biological assays and computer software to analyze large numbers of proteins and their associated interactions. This characterization explores the whole data set and can uncover patterns that merit further investigation.

“The strong point about proteomics is that no initial hypothesis is needed,” Krumm and Küster wrote.

In this study, their data showed that an unknown compound suppressed MDSC activity in the mice cells. They tested this compound in immunoassays with human cells where its immune activity ranged from no effect to strong effect. Following a round of proteomic analysis, they found that the active compound upregulated the expression of proteins responsible for cell detoxification; this led to a reduction in reactive oxygen species, which play a role in promoting various diseases, including cancer. By studying this pattern, the researchers determined that a strong potential mechanism of action for new drugs to modulate MDSC activity would be to upregulate proteins that reduce reactive oxygen species.

“We were rather surprised to see how selectively the active compound upregulated proteins associated with detoxification functions,” Krumm and Küster wrote.

In their analysis, they found two proteins that closely upregulated MDSC activity: Acylphosphatase 1, also known as ACYP1, and a HLA class II histocompatibility antigen gamma chain protein, also known as CD74.

In the future, drug developers looking to target MDSC immunosuppression can target the downregulation of ACYP1 and CD74 to attack MDSCs. This study is “a good example for how proteomics can be used for drug discovery in general and in mode of action hypothesis in particular,” Krumm and Küster wrote.

“By making all data available to the public,” they concluded, “we hope that biologists in the field of MDSC will find our data and chemical tool compounds useful and enriching to their own research.”

Enjoy reading ASBMB Today?

Become a member to receive the print edition monthly and the digital edition weekly.

Learn more
Oluwadamilola “Dami” Oke

Oluwadamilola “Dami” Oke is a Ph.D. candidate of biomedical engineering at the George Washington University with an interest in communication and outreach for science advancement. She is an ASBMB Today contributing writer.

Get the latest from ASBMB Today

Enter your email address, and we’ll send you a weekly email with recent articles, interviews and more.

Latest in Science

Science highlights or most popular articles

What is metabolism
News

What is metabolism

May 12, 2024

A biochemist explains how different people convert energy differently – and why that matters for your health.

What’s next in the Ozempic era
News

What’s next in the Ozempic era

May 11, 2024

Diabetes, weight loss and now heart health: A new family of drugs is changing the way scientists are thinking about obesity — and more uses are on the horizon.

How a gene spurs tooth development
Journal News

How a gene spurs tooth development

May 7, 2024

University of Iowa researchers find a clue in a rare genetic disorder’s missing chromosome.

New class of antimicrobials discovered in soil bacteria
News

New class of antimicrobials discovered in soil bacteria

May 5, 2024

Scientists have mined Streptomyces for antibiotics for nearly a century, but the newly identified umbrella toxin escaped notice.

New study finds potential targets at chromosome ends for degenerative disease prevention
News

New study finds potential targets at chromosome ends for degenerative disease prevention

May 4, 2024

UC Santa Cruz inventors of nanopore sequencing hail innovative use of their revolutionary genetic-reading technique.

From the journals: JLR
Journal News

From the journals: JLR

May 3, 2024

How lipogenesis works in liver steatosis. Removing protein aggregates from stressed cells. Linking plasma lipid profiles to cardiovascular health. Read about recent papers on these topics.