ACTP: A webserver for predicting potential targets and relevant pathways of autophagy-modulating compounds

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Abstract

Autophagy (macroautophagy) is well known as an evolutionarily conserved lysosomal degradation process for long-lived proteins and damaged organelles. Recently, accumulating evidence has revealed a series of small-molecule compounds that may activate or inhibit autophagy for therapeutic potential on human diseases. However, targeting autophagy for drug discovery still remains in its infancy. In this study, we developed a webserver called Autophagic Compound-Target Prediction (ACTP) (http://actp.liu-lab.com/) that could predict autophagic targets and relevant pathways for a given compound. The flexible docking of submitted small-molecule compound (s) to potential autophagic targets could be performed by backend reverse docking. The webpage would return structure-based scores and relevant pathways for each predicted target. Thus, these results provide a basis for the rapid prediction of potential targets/pathways of possible autophagy-activating or autophagy-inhibiting compounds without labor-intensive experiments. Moreover, ACTP will be helpful to shed light on identifying more novel autophagy-activating or autophagy-inhibiting compounds for future therapeutic implications.

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Xie, T., Zhang, L., Zhang, S., Ouyang, L., Cai, H., & Liu, B. (2016). ACTP: A webserver for predicting potential targets and relevant pathways of autophagy-modulating compounds. Oncotarget, 7(9), 10015–10022. https://doi.org/10.18632/oncotarget.7015

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