Energetics-based methods for protein folding and stability measurements. - Prestwick Chemical Libraries
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Energetics-based methods for protein folding and stability measurements.

Geer MA, Fitzgerald MC
Annual review of analytical chemistry (Palo Alto, Calif.) - vol. 7 209-28 (2014)

Annual review of analytical chemistry (Palo Alto, Calif.)

Over the past 15 years, a series of energetics-based techniques have been developed for the thermodynamic analysis of protein folding and stability. These techniques include Stability of Unpurified Proteins from Rates of amide H/D Exchange (SUPREX), pulse proteolysis, Stability of Proteins from Rates of Oxidation (SPROX), slow histidine H/D exchange, lysine amidination, and quantitative cysteine reactivity (QCR). The above techniques, which are the subject of this review, all utilize chemical or enzymatic modification reactions to probe the chemical denaturant- or temperature-induced equilibrium unfolding properties of proteins and protein-ligand complexes. They employ various mass spectrometry-, sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE)-, and optical spectroscopy-based readouts that are particularly advantageous for high-throughput and in some cases multiplexed analyses. This has created the opportunity to use protein folding and stability measurements in new applications such as in high-throughput screening projects to identify novel protein ligands and in mode-of-action studies to identify protein targets of a particular ligand.

More info at : http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24896313