Proteases of Infectious Agents

Author: Dunn   Ben  

Publisher: Elsevier Science‎

Publication year: 1999

E-ISBN: 9780080525747

P-ISBN(Paperback): 9780124205109

P-ISBN(Hardback):  9780124205109

Subject: Q1 General Biology;Q2 Cytobiology;Q93 Microbiology;R18 Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine;R51 infectious diseases;R74 Neurology and Psychiatry;R741 Neurology;R9 Pharmacy

Language: ENG

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Description

Proteases are enzymes that essentially "eat" protein. Without proteases, infectious organisms cannot properly mount an attack against a host. It is for this reason that proteases have become popular targets for drug discovery. Research has shown that if you can inhibit the protease, you can defend against the invading microbe. The defense against HIV, the virus that causes AIDS, is the best-documented case of the efficacy of protease inhibitors. Researchers are now trying to deploy this strategy against several infectious agents. This book gives information that is useful in that search.
Proteases of Infectious Agents collects reviews from leading experts describing the latest information on the properties of key enzymes from a variety of viruses, fungi, and parasites. Each chapter provides the critical facts needed to initiate a drug discovery effort in that particular area.

  • Includes information on the basic biology and function of proteases
  • Provides global survey of current research efforts in protease inhibitors
  • Illustrates how structure-based drug design targets effective and selective compounds
  • Highlights important diseases that provide economically important targets
  • Describes the role of proteases as important new targets for drug discovery

Chapter

Front Cover

pp.:  1 – 4

Contents

pp.:  8 – 14

Contributors

pp.:  14 – 16

Preface

pp.:  16 – 20

Chapter 1. HIV Protease as a Target for the Design of Antiviral Agents for AIDS

pp.:  20 – 80

Chapter 2. Proteases of the Hepatitis C Virus

pp.:  80 – 112

Chapter 3. Human Herpesvirus Proteases

pp.:  112 – 136

Chapter 4. The Secreted Proteinases from Candida: Challenges for Structure-Aided Drug Design

pp.:  136 – 158

Chapter 5. Proteolytic Enzymes of the Viruses of the Family Picornaviridae

pp.:  158 – 184

Chapter 6. Proteases as Drug Targets for the Treatment of Malaria

pp.:  184 – 208

Chapter 7. Chagas Disease

pp.:  208 – 224

Chapter 8. Cellular Proteinases and Viral Infection: Influenza Virus, Sendai Virus, and HIV-1

pp.:  224 – 238

Chapter 9. Bacterial Type I Signal Peptidases

pp.:  238 – 252

Chapter 10. Proteinases Involved in Plant Virus Genome Expression

pp.:  252 – 284

Index

pp.:  284 – 302

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