Researchers devise new way to target and correct disease-related proteins
ӳý scientists built a diverse library of compounds and found one that stabilizes a dysfunctional protein in Crohn’s disease, demonstrating their library’s potential to uncover new therapeutic strategies.

Credit: Courtesy of the Xavier and Schreiber labs.
An illustration of a library compound bound to FKBP12 (dark green) and ATL16L1 T300A (purple). Also featured are the FKBP12 binding motif (light blue triangle), the DNA barcode (red double helix), and the combinatorial library element (red hexagon).
Paper cited
Tan ZY, et al. . Cell Chemical Biology. Online Jan 2, 2025.
Funding
The work was supported by the National Institutes of Health and The Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust.