Synfacts 2020; 16(07): 0861
DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1707870
Chemistry in Medicine and Biology
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Chemically Induced Dimerization

Contributor(s):
Dirk Trauner
,
Andrej Shemet
Spencer DM, Wandless TJ, Schreiber SL. * Crabtree GR. * Harvard University, Cambridge and Stanford University, USA
Controlling Signal Transduction with Synthetic Ligands.

Science 1993;
262: 1019-1024
Further Information

Publication History

Publication Date:
17 June 2020 (online)

 

Significance

Chemically induced dimerization (CID) is a powerful method in chemical biology that utilizes small-molecule chemical ligands to induce the dimerization (or oligomerization) of proteins and thus modulate their function in cells. It can be used to manipulate cellular regulatory pathways ranging from signal transduction to transcription. One of the first CID systems was developed by the laboratories of Schreiber and Crabtree in 1993.


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Comment

The researchers synthesized homodimeric derivatives of the natural product FK506, FK1012s, which bind to the immunophilin FKBP. These ligands were used to dimerize and activate signaling proteins that were fused to FKBP. The monomeric form of the ligand (FK506-M), in contrast, blocked the signaling pathway.


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