Innovation

SPATIO-TEMPORAL CONTROL OF PROTEIN INTERACTIONS

University of California System: University of California, San Francisco
posted on 12/07/2009

BACKGROUND:  There is a general need for dynamically regulatable protein binding domains to control functional protein interactions in a variety of experimental and commercial applications. The majority of such systems that have been developed are based on the administration of chemical dimerizers which require the slow, irreversible diffusion into the cell of small molecules that target the dimer-interface site. An alternative method is the control of protein interaction in any suitable host cell or organisms by light. This invention relates to a light-regulatable protein-protein interaction system based upon phytochromes, a family of photoreceptors that enable plants to adapt to their prevailing light environment. TECHNOLOGY:   UCSF inventors have developed the first genetically encoded system for the fine spatial and temporal control of the localization and activity of proteins on sub-micrometer and sub-second scales. The system has further been optimized to be modular and easily switched to future arbitrary signaling pairs and localization tags.

Suggested Uses

  •  Studying protein-protein interactions
  • Studying protein localization in a spatio-temporal fashion
  • Versatile tool for dynamically tagging cells or cell sub-populations

Advantages

  • Reversible, Second-timescale control of protein-protein interactions
  • Capable of spatial, sub-cellular targeting of enzymatic activity
  • High-throughput adaptable

Innovation Details
 

File Number: 20050 

Other Information:

IP STATUS
PCT patent application has been filed; world wide rights available.Publications

The Scientist selected this as one of the TOP TEN INNOVATIONS OF 2009:

http://www.the-scientist.com/article/display/56171/

Here is a link to the original paper:

http://limlab.ucsf.edu/papers/pdfs/al_2009.pdf


IP Protection

Copyright: ©2009-2010, The Regents of the University of California

License Online

This innovation currently is not available for online licensing. Please contact Ellen Kats at University of California System: University of California, San Francisco for more information.

Request more info via email request more info
People

Case Manager:

Ellen Kats Ellen Kats

Innovations (23)


Download Technology Brief (PDF)


Followed By

Follow this innovation



No one is following this innovation.

Organization
Profile
Related Tags

Find more innovations


February 11, 2009

7,868 members 17,196 innovations 152 organizations

Browse

Linda L. Restifo, M.D., Ph.D. - University of Arizona

"I want to say again how happy I am about the iBridge Network mechanism. This seems ideal for NeuronMetrics and I'm very pleased we will be part of this venture."  read more...