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Target 2035 – update on the quest for a probe for every protein

Authors :
Susanne Müller
Suzanne Ackloo
Arij Al Chawaf
Bissan Al-Lazikani
Albert Antolin
Jonathan B. Baell
Hartmut Beck
Shaunna Beedie
Ulrich A. K. Betz
Gustavo Arruda Bezerra
Paul E. Brennan
David Brown
Peter J. Brown
Alex N. Bullock
Adrian J. Carter
Apirat Chaikuad
Mathilde Chaineau
Alessio Ciulli
Ian Collins
Jan Dreher
David Drewry
Kristina Edfeldt
Aled M. Edwards
Ursula Egner
Stephen V. Frye
Stephen M. Fuchs
Matthew D. Hall
Ingo V. Hartung
Alexander Hillisch
Stephen H. Hitchcock
Evert Homan
Natarajan Kannan
James R. Kiefer
Stefan Knapp
Milka Kostic
Stefan Kubicek
Andrew R. Leach
Sven Lindemann
Brian D. Marsden
Hisanori Matsui
Jordan L. Meier
Daniel Merk
Maurice Michel
Maxwell R. Morgan
Anke Mueller-Fahrnow
Dafydd R. Owen
Benjamin G. Perry
Saul H. Rosenberg
Kumar Singh Saikatendu
Matthieu Schapira
Cora Scholten
Sujata Sharma
Anton Simeonov
Michael Sundström
Giulio Superti-Furga
Matthew H. Todd
Claudia Tredup
Masoud Vedadi
Frank von Delft
Timothy M. Willson
Georg E. Winter
Paul Workman
Cheryl H. Arrowsmith
Source :
RSC Medicinal Chemistry

Abstract

Twenty years after the publication of the first draft of the human genome, our knowledge of the human proteome is still fragmented. The challenge of translating the wealth of new knowledge from genomics into new medicines is that proteins, and not genes, are the primary executers of biological function. Therefore, much of how biology works in health and disease must be understood through the lens of protein function. Accordingly, a subset of human proteins has been at the heart of research interests of scientists over the centuries, and we have accumulated varying degrees of knowledge about approximately 65% of the human proteome. Nevertheless, a large proportion of proteins in the human proteome (∼35%) remains uncharacterized, and less than 5% of the human proteome has been successfully targeted for drug discovery. This highlights the profound disconnect between our abilities to obtain genetic information and subsequent development of effective medicines. Target 2035 is an international federation of biomedical scientists from the public and private sectors, which aims to address this gap by developing and applying new technologies to create by year 2035 chemogenomic libraries, chemical probes, and/or biological probes for the entire human proteome.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
26328682
Volume :
13
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
RSC Medicinal Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....266ade21665fdf0a3ecd1238c10ae9ec
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/d1md00228g