Definition
A collection of thousands to billions of different peptide sequences used to identify peptides that bind a specific target with high affinity.

Detailed Explanation

A collection of thousands to billions of different peptide sequences used to identify peptides that bind a specific target with high affinity. Libraries can be synthetic (produced by split-and-mix combinatorial chemistry on beads, generating up to ~10⁸ sequences) or biological (phage display, mRNA display, ribosome display, each capable of screening >10¹² variants).

The process: synthesize/display the library, screen against a target (receptor, enzyme, antibody), wash away non-binders, identify and sequence the 'winners.' Phage display (Nobel Prize 2018, George Smith and Gregory Winter) is the most widely used biological method. Affinity maturation — iteratively improving the best hits through mutagenesis and re-screening — is then used to optimize lead peptides into drug candidates.

Key Facts

  • A collection of thousands to billions of different peptide sequences used to identify peptides that bind a specific target with high affinity.
  • Libraries can be synthetic (produced by split-and-mix combinatorial chemistry on beads, generating up to ~10⁸ sequences) or biological (phage display, mRNA display, ribosome display, each capable of screening >10¹² variants).
  • The process: synthesize/display the library, screen against a target (receptor, enzyme, antibody), wash away non-binders, identify and sequence the 'winners.' Phage display (Nobel Prize 2018, George Smith and Gregory Winter) is the most widely used biological method.
  • Affinity maturation — iteratively improving the best hits through mutagenesis and re-screening — is then used to optimize lead peptides into drug candidates.
Related Terms Phage Display Affinity Receptor Peptidomimetic Peptide

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PeptideDefinition.com provides educational content about peptide science. Not medical advice. Consult a licensed healthcare provider for medical decisions.