Species | Target name | Source | Bibliographic reference |
---|---|---|---|
Influenza A virus | Nonstructural protein 1 | Starlite/ChEMBL | No references |
Homo sapiens | TAR DNA binding protein | Starlite/ChEMBL | No references |
Homo sapiens | glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor | Starlite/ChEMBL | No references |
Species | Potential target | Known druggable target | Length | Alignment span | Identity |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Loa Loa (eye worm) | pigment dispersing factor receptor c | glucagon-like peptide 1 receptor | 463 aa | 388 aa | 25.8 % |
Mycobacterium tuberculosis | Hypothetical protein | Nonstructural protein 1 | 230 aa | 202 aa | 23.8 % |
Species | Potential target | Raw | Global | Species |
---|---|---|---|---|
Loa Loa (eye worm) | RNA binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 1 |
Brugia malayi | RNA recognition motif domain containing protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 1 |
Schistosoma mansoni | tar DNA-binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 0.5 |
Schistosoma mansoni | tar DNA-binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 0.5 |
Loa Loa (eye worm) | TAR-binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 1 |
Loa Loa (eye worm) | RNA recognition domain-containing protein domain-containing protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 1 |
Schistosoma mansoni | tar DNA-binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 0.5 |
Echinococcus granulosus | tar DNA binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 0.5 |
Schistosoma mansoni | tar DNA-binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 0.5 |
Echinococcus multilocularis | tar DNA binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 0.5 |
Schistosoma mansoni | tar DNA-binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 0.5 |
Brugia malayi | TAR-binding protein | 0.0076 | 1 | 1 |
Activity type | Activity value | Assay description | Source | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Potency (functional) | 1.5849 uM | PubChem BioAssay. qHTS of GLP-1 Receptor Inverse Agonists (Inhibition Mode). (Class of assay: confirmatory) | ChEMBL. | No reference |
Potency (functional) | 5.6234 uM | PubChem BioAssay. qHTS of TDP-43 Inhibitors. (Class of assay: confirmatory) | ChEMBL. | No reference |
Potency (functional) | = 10 um | PUBCHEM_BIOASSAY: qHTS Assay for Inhibitors of Influenza NS1 Protein Function. (Class of assay: confirmatory) | ChEMBL. | No reference |
Potency (functional) | 10.4179 uM | PUBCHEM_BIOASSAY: Primary qHTS for delayed death inhibitors of the malarial parasite plastid, 96 hour incubation. (Class of assay: confirmatory) [Related pubchem assays (depositor defined):AID488745, AID488752, AID488774, AID504848, AID504850] | ChEMBL. | No reference |
Potency (functional) | 17.7828 uM | PUBCHEM_BIOASSAY: qHTS for Inhibitors of binding or entry into cells for Lassa Virus. (Class of assay: confirmatory) [Related pubchem assays (depositor defined):AID463114, AID540249] | ChEMBL. | No reference |
Potency (functional) | = 79.4328 um | PUBCHEM_BIOASSAY: qHTS Inhibitors of AmpC Beta-Lactamase (assay with detergent). (Class of assay: confirmatory) [Related pubchem assays: 1002 (Confirmation Concentration-Response Assay for Inhibitors of AmpC Beta-Lactamase (assay with detergent)), 585 (Promiscuous and Specific Inhibitors of AmpC Beta-Lactamase (assay without detergent) - a screen old NIH MLSMR collection), 584 (Promiscuous and Specific Inhibitors of AmpC Beta-Lactamase (assay with detergent) - a screen of the old NIH MLSMR collection), 1003 (Confirmation Cuvette-Based Assay for Inhibitors of AmpC Beta-Lactamase (assay with detergent))] | ChEMBL. | No reference |
Potency (functional) | 89.1251 uM | PUBCHEM_BIOASSAY: qHTS for Inhibitors of Polymerase Iota. (Class of assay: confirmatory) [Related pubchem assays (depositor defined):AID588623] | ChEMBL. | No reference |
Potency (functional) | 100 uM | PUBCHEM_BIOASSAY: HTS for Inhibitors of HP1-beta Chromodomain Interactions with Methylated Histone Tails. (Class of assay: confirmatory) [Related pubchem assays (depositor defined):AID488962] | ChEMBL. | No reference |
Species name | Source | Reference | Is orphan |
---|---|---|---|
Plasmodium falciparum | ChEMBL23 | ||
Homo sapiens | ChEMBL23 |
Many chemical entities in TDR Targets come from high-throughput screenings with whole cells or tissue samples, and not all assayed compounds have been tested against a single a single target protein, probably because they get ruled out during screening process. Even if these compounds may have not been of interest in the original screening, they may come as interesting leads for other screening assays. Furthermore, we may be able to propose drug-target associations using chemical similarities and network patterns.