Profiling the Protein Targets of Unmodified Bio-Active Molecules with Drug Affinity
Responsive Target Stability and Liquid Chromatography/Tandem Mass Spectrometry
Identifying the target proteins of bioactive small molecules is a key step in understanding
mode-of-action of the drug and addressing the underlying mechanisms responsible for
a particular phenotype. Proteomics has been successfully used to elucidate the target
protein profiles of unmodified and ligand-modified bioactive small molecules. In the
latter approach, compounds can be modified via click chemistry and combined with activity-based
protein profiling. Target proteins are then enriched by performing a pull-down with
the modified ligand. Methods that utilize unmodified bioactive small molecules include
the cellular thermal shift assay, thermal proteome profiling, stability of proteins
from rates of oxidation, and the drug affinity responsive target stability (DARTS)
determination (or read-out). This review highlights recent proteomic approaches utilizing
data-dependent analysis and data-independent analysis to identify target proteins
by DARTS. When combined with liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry, DARTS
enables the identification of proteins that bind to drug molecules that leads to a
conformational change in the target protein(s). In addition, an effective strategy
is proposed for selecting the target protein(s) from within the pool of analyzed candidates.
With additional complementary methods, the biologically relevant target proteins that
bind to the small bio-active molecules can be further validated.