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  • Hi, I'm Steve Kreuzer, a Ph.D. candidate in Dr.Tess Moon's IMPACT Lab in the

  • Department of Mechanical Engineering at The University of Texas at Austin. And we're studying

  • different ways in which protein mechanics can lead to therapeutic intervention.

  • We think of a protein as a three-dimensional combination of secondary structures, each

  • of these secondary structures being represented by the different color struts on this object,

  • we can understand different ways in which mechanical forces can lead to therapeutic

  • intervention.

  • If we take a normal protein, under unstretched conditions, and we consider its interaction

  • with a small molecule drug.

  • This small molecule drug may not be able to fit into the protein without any changes in

  • shape. However, upon the application of mechanical forces, you may get a shape change of the

  • protein. This shape change may be enough to allow small molecule drugs to interact with

  • the protein and disrupt its behavior.

  • Therefore, mechanical properties of proteins may allow us to target drugs at mechanically

  • regulated or mechanically activated proteins.

  • If we think about a protein as a three-dimensional construction of individual secondary structures,

  • each represented by the different color bands on this model, we can understand the value

  • of trying to describe the mechanical behavior of an individual secondary structure. In such

  • events, what we study is how the protein secondary structure responds to applied loads, so that

  • if I pull on this secondary structure, I can understand the ways in which the secondary

  • structure unfolds.

  • And one of the questions I always get is "when are cells loaded?" Perhaps a classic example

  • of this is related to blood flow. We have the example of the heart pumping blood throughout

  • our body. As the heart pumps, it expands and contracts, expands and contracts. Each one

  • of those expansions and contractions are stretching the cells inside the heart. Not only are the

  • cells inside the heart stretching, but also the blood is flowing throughout our body.

  • Now we can feel this blood flow by checking for our own pulse. When you feel your pulse,

  • what you're really feeling is the stretching of the underlying artery as the blood flows

  • past your fingers.

  • Now if we think about an artery as being lined by cells on the interior, we can understand

  • that with each one of those pulses, each time the artery stretches, those cells that are

  • lining that interior are also forced to stretch. They relax back and stretch again, much like

  • this demonstration of a cell on the inside of an artery.

  • In this demonstration, we've drawn a cell on the wall of an artery. As the blood pulses

  • past that cell, we can see an expansion of the cell and a relaxation back to its original

  • size. This expansion is the stretching of the cell and causes the stretching of the

  • proteins inside of that cell.

Hi, I'm Steve Kreuzer, a Ph.D. candidate in Dr.Tess Moon's IMPACT Lab in the

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IMPACT研究所 - 機械工学と生物学の融合、創薬デザインの新たなフロンティア (IMPACT Laboratory -- Mechanical Engineering Meets Biology, New Frontiers in Drug Design)

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    楊子儀 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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