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Proteomics in Drug Research

M Hamacher (Autor)

Software / Digital Media
383 Seiten
2006
Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH (Hersteller)
978-3-527-60823-2 (ISBN)
269,95 inkl. MwSt
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Including contributions from the pharmaceutical industry and public proteomics consortia, this handbook contains everything professional proteomics users need, from the skillful handling of proteomic technology to successful applications in target finding and drug discovery.
From skillful handling of the wide range of technologies to successful applications in drug discovery, this handbook has all the information professional proteomics users need. Edited by experts working at one of the hot spots in European proteomic research, the numerous contributions by experts from the pharmaceutical industry and public proteomics consortia to provide the necessary perspective on current trends and developments in this exciting field. Following an introductory chapter, the book moves on to proteomic technologies, such as protein biochips, protein-protein interactions, and proteome analysis in situ. The section on applications includes bioinformatics, Alzheimer's disease, neuroproteomics, plasma and T-cell proteomics, differential phosphoproteome analysis and biomarkers, as well as pharmacogenomics. It is an invaluable reading for medicinal and pharmaceutical chemists, gene technologists, molecular biologists, and those working in the pharmaceutical industry.

All six editors are Researchers at the Medical Proteom-Center hosted by the University of Bochum (Germany). This international research center was established in 2002 under the leadership of Helmut E. Meyer, a co-founder of the Protagen AG. Professor Meyer is also initiator and coordinator of the Human Brain Proteome Project within the German National Genome Research Net (NGFN) as well as of the Brain Proteome Project within the Human Proteome Organisation (HUPO BPP).

A Personal Foreword.Preface.List of Contributors.I Introduction.1 Administrative Optimization of Proteomics Networks for Drug Development (Andre van Hall and Michael Hamacher).1.1 Introduction.1.2 Tasks and Aims of Administration.1.3 Networking.1.4 Evaluation of Biomarkers.1.5 A Network for Proteomics in Drug Development.1.6 Realization of Administrative Networking: the Brain Proteome Projects.References.2 Proteomic Data Standardization, Deposition and Exchange (Sandra Orchard, Henning Hermjakob, Manuela Pruess, and Rolf Apweiler).2.1 Introduction.2.2 Protein Analysis Tools.2.3 Data Storage and Retrieval.2.4 The Proteome Standards Initiative.2.5 General Proteomics Standards (GPS).2.6 Mass Spectrometry.2.7 Molecular Interactions.2.8 Summary.References.II Proteomic Technologies.3 Difference Gel Electrophoresis (DIGE): the Next Generation of Two-Dimensional Gel Electrophoresis for Clinical Research (Barbara Sitek, Burghardt Scheibe, Klaus Jung, Alexander Schramm and Kai Stuhler).3.1 Introduction.3.2 Difference Gel Electrophoresis: Next Generation of Protein Detection in 2-DE.References.4 Biological Mass Spectrometry: Basics and Drug Discovery Related Approaches (Bettina Warscheid).4.1 Introduction.4.2 Ionization Principles.4.3 Mass Spectrometric Instrumentation.4.4 Protein Identification Strategies.4.5 Quantitative Mass Spectrometry for Comparative and Functional Proteomics.4.6 Metabolic Labeling Approaches.4.7 Chemical Labeling Approaches.4.8 Quantitative MS for Deciphering Protein-Protein Interactions.4.9 Conclusions.References.5 Multidimensional Column Liquid Chromatography (LC) in Proteomics - Where Are We Now? (Egidijus Machtejevas, Klaus K. Unger and Reinhard Ditz).5.1 Introduction.5.2 Why Do We Need MD-LC/MS Methods?5.3 Basic Aspects of Developing a MD-LC/MS Method.5.4 Applications of MD-LC Separation in Proteomics - a Brief Survey.5.5 Sample Clean-Up: Ways to Overcome the "Bottleneck" in Proteome Analysis.5.6 Summary.References.6 Peptidomics Technologies and Applications in Drug Research (Michael Schrader, Petra Budde, Horst Rose, Norbert Lamping, Peter Schulz-Knappe and Hans-Dieter Zucht).6.1 Introduction.6.2 Peptides in Drug Research.6.3 Development of Peptidomics Technologies.6.4 Applications of Differential Display Peptidomics.6.5 Outlook.References.7 Protein Biochips in the Proteomic Field (Angelika Lucking and Dolores J. Cahill).7.1 Introduction.7.2 Technological Aspects.7.3 Applications of Protein Biochips.7.4 Contribution to Pharmaceutical Research and Development.References.8 Current Developments for the In Vitro Characterization of Protein Interactions (Daniela Moll, Bastian Zimmermann, Frank Gesellchen and Friedrich W. Herberg).8.1 Introduction.8.2 The Model System: cAMP-Dependent Protein Kinase.8.3 Real-time Monitoring of Interactions Using SPR Biosensors.8.4 ITC in Drug Design.8.5 Fluorescence Polarization, a Tool for High-Throughput Screening.8.6 AlphaScreen as a Pharmaceutical Screening Tool.8.7 Conclusions.References.9 Molecular Networks in Morphologically Intact Cells and Tissue-Challenge for Biology and Drug Development (Walter Schubert, Manuela Friedenberger and Marcus Bode).9.1 Introduction.9.2 A Metaphor of the Cell.9.3 Mapping Molecular Networks as Patterns: Theoretical Considerations.9.4 Imaging Cycler Robots.9.5 Formalization of Network Motifs as Geometric Objects.9.6 Gain of Functional Information: Perspectives for Drug Development.References.III Applications.10 From Target to Lead Synthesis (Stefan Mullner, Holger Stark, Paivi Niskanen, Erich Eigenbrodt, Sybille Mazurek and Hugo Fasold).10.1 Introduction.10.2 Materials and Methods.10.3 Results.10.4 Discussion.References.11 Differential Phosphoproteome Analysis in Medical Research (Elke Butt and Katrin Marcus).11.1 Introduction.11.2 Phosphoproteomics of Human Platelets.11.3 Identification of cAMP- and cGMP-Dependent Protein Kinase Substrates in Human Platelets.11.4 Identification of a New Therapeutic Target for Anti-Inflammatory Therapy by Analyzing Differences in the Phosphoproteome of Wild Type and Knock Out Mice.11.5 Concluding Remarks and Outlook.References.12 Biomarker Discovery in Renal Cell Carcinoma Applying Proteome-Based Studies in Combination with Serology (Barbara Seliger and Roland Kellner).12.1 Introduction.12.2 Rational Approaches Used for Biomarker Discovery.12.3 Advantages of Different Proteome-Based Technologies for the Identification of Biomarkers.12.4 Type of Biomarker.12.5 Proteome Analysis of Renal Cell Carcinoma Cell Lines and Biopsies.12.6 Validation of Differentially Expressed Proteins.12.7 Conclusions.References.13 Studies of Drug Resistance Using Organelle Proteomics (Catherine Fenselau and Zongming Fu).13.1 Introduction.13.2 Objectives and Experimental Design.13.3 Changes in Plasma Membrane and Nuclear Proteins in MCF-7 Cells Resistant to Mitoxantrone.References.14 Clinical Neuroproteomics of Human Body Fluids: CSF and Blood Assays for Early and Differential Diagnosis of Dementia (Jens Wiltfang and Piotr Lewczuk).14.1 Introduction.14.2 Neurochemical Markers of Alzheimer's Disease.14.3 Conclusions.References.15 Proteomics in Alzheimer's Disease (Michael Fountoulakis, Sophia Kossida and Gert Lubec).15.1 Introduction.15.2 Proteomic Analysis.15.3 Proteins with Deranged Levels and Modifications in AD.15.4 Limitations.References.16 Cardiac Proteomics (Emma McGregor and Michael J. Dunn).16.1 Heart Proteomics.16.2 Vessel Proteomics.16.3 Concluding Remarks.References.IV To the Market.17 Innovation Processes (Sven Ruger).17.1 Introduction.17.2 Innovation Process Criteria.17.3 The Concept.17.4 Market Attractiveness.17.5 Competitive Market Position.17.6 Competitive Technology Position.17.7 Strengthen the Fit.17.8 Reward.17.9 Risk.17.10 Innovation Process Deliverables for each Stage.17.11 Stage Gate-Like Process.17.12 Conclusion.Subject Index.

Verlagsort Weinheim
Sprache englisch
Gewicht 10 g
Themenwelt Naturwissenschaften Biologie
Naturwissenschaften Chemie
ISBN-10 3-527-60823-0 / 3527608230
ISBN-13 978-3-527-60823-2 / 9783527608232
Zustand Neuware
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