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1.
High-throughput screening (HTS) of large chemical libraries has become the main source of new lead compounds for drug development. Several specialized detection technologies have been developed to facilitate the cost- and time-efficient screening of millions of compounds. However, concerns have been raised, claiming that different HTS technologies may produce different hits, thus limiting trust in the reliability of HTS data. This study was aimed to investigate the reliability of the authors most frequently used assay techniques: scintillation proximity assay (SPA) and homogeneous time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET). To investigate the data concordance between these 2 detection technologies, the authors screened a large subset of the Schering compound library consisting of 300,000 compounds for inhibitors of a nonreceptor tyrosine kinase. They chose to set up this study in realistic HTS scale to ensure statistical significance of the results. The findings clearly demonstrate that the choice of detection technology has no significant impact on hit finding, provided that assays are biochemically equivalent. Data concordance is up to 90%. The little differences in hit findings are caused by threshold setting but not by systematic differences between the technologies. The most significant difference between the compared techniques is that in the SPA format, more false-positive primary hits were obtained.  相似文献   

2.
After finishing the primary high-throughput screening, the screening team is often faced with thousands of hits to be evaluated further. Effective filtering of these hits is crucial in identifying leads. Mode of inhibition (MOI) study is extremely useful in validating whether the observed compound activity is specific to the biological target. In this article, the authors describe a high-throughput MOI determination method for evaluating thousands of compounds using an existing screening infrastructure. Based on enzyme or receptor kinetics theory, the authors developed the method by measuring the ratio of IC(50) or percent inhibition at 2 carefully chosen substrate or ligand concentrations to define an inhibitor as competitive, uncompetitive, or noncompetitive. This not only facilitates binning of HTS hits according to their MOI but also greatly expands HTS utility in support of the medicinal chemistry team's lead optimization practice. Three case studies are presented to demonstrate how the method was applied successfully in 3 discovery programs targeting either an enzyme or a G-protein-coupled receptor.  相似文献   

3.
The leukocyte-specific integrin CD11b/CD18 plays a key role in the biological function of these cells and represents a validated therapeutic target for inflammatory diseases. Currently, the low affinity interaction between CD11b/CD18 integrin and its respective ligand poses a challenge in the development of cell-based adhesion assays for the high-throughput screening (HTS) environment. Here the authors describe a simple cell-based adhesion assay that can be readily used for HTS for the discovery of functional regulators of CD11b/CD18. The assay consistently produces acceptable Z' values (> 0.5) for HTS. After testing the assay using 2 established blocking antibodies as reference biologicals, the authors performed a proof-of-concept primary screen using a library of 6612 compounds and identified both agonist and antagonist hits.  相似文献   

4.
Gaucher disease (GD), the most common lysosomal storage disorder, results from the inherited deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme glucocerebrosidase (GCase). Previously, wildtype GCase was used for high throughput screening (HTS) of large collections of compounds to identify small molecule chaperones that could be developed as new therapies for GD. However, the compounds identified from HTS usually showed reduced potency later in confirmatory cell-based assays. An alternate strategy is to perform HTS on mutant enzyme to identify different lead compounds, including those enhancing mutant enzyme activities. We developed a new screening assay using enzyme extract prepared from the spleen of a patient with Gaucher disease with genotype N370S/N370S. In tissue extracts, GCase is in a more native physiological environment, and is present with the native activator saposin C and other potential cofactors. Using this assay, we screened a library of 250,000 compounds and identified novel modulators of mutant GCase including 14 new lead inhibitors and 30 lead activators. The activities of some of the primary hits were confirmed in subsequent cell-based assays using patient-derived fibroblasts. These results suggest that primary screening assays using enzyme extracted from tissues is an alternative approach to identify high quality, physiologically relevant lead compounds for drug development.  相似文献   

5.
The human mitochondrial peptide deformylase (HsPDF) provides a potential new target for broadly acting antiproliferative agents. To identify novel nonpeptidomimetic and nonhydroxamic acid-based inhibitors of HsPDF, the authors have developed a high-throughput screening (HTS) strategy using a fluorescence polarization (FP)-based binding assay as the primary assay for screening chemical libraries, followed by an enzymatic-based assay to confirm hits, prior to characterization of their antiproliferative activity against established tumor cell lines. The authors present the results and performance of the established strategy tested in a pilot screen of 2880 compounds and the identification of the 1st inhibitors. Two common scaffolds were identified within the hits. Furthermore, cytotoxicity studies revealed that most of the confirmed hits have antiproliferative activity. These findings demonstrate that the designed strategy can identify novel functional inhibitors and provide a powerful alternative to the use of functional assays in HTS and support the hypothesis that HsPDF inhibitors may constitute a new class of antiproliferative agent.  相似文献   

6.
The ability to identify active compounds (3hits2) from large chemical libraries accurately and rapidly has been the ultimate goal in developing high-throughput screening (HTS) assays. The ability to identify hits from a particular HTS assay depends largely on the suitability or quality of the assay used in the screening. The criteria or parameters for evaluating the 3suitability2 of an HTS assay for hit identification are not well defined and hence it still remains difficult to compare the quality of assays directly. In this report, a screening window coefficient, called 3Z-factor,2 is defined. This coefficient is reflective of both the assay signal dynamic range and the data variation associated with the signal measurements, and therefore is suitable for assay quality assessment. The Z-factor is a dimensionless, simple statistical characteristic for each HTS assay. The Z-factor provides a useful tool for comparison and evaluation of the quality of assays, and can be utilized in assay optimization and validation.  相似文献   

7.
An early drug discovery approach focusing on gene families can benefit from strategies that exploit common signaling mechanisms to more effectively identify and characterize novel chemical lead structures. Multiplexing, defined as the screening of multiple targets within the same experiment, is an example of this strategy. Here, the authors describe a technique that allows multiplexing of a common assay type used to study G-protein-coupled receptors: changes in intracellular Ca2+ levels as measured by Molecular Device's fluorometric imaging plate reader (FLIPR). The multiplexed FLIPR assays showed the expected pharmacological properties of single assays, with good reproducibility and Z* factors. The authors used them to screen large compound libraries in 2 multiplexed assay designs. The 1st used a single-cell line expressing 2 different receptors and the 2nd a mixture of 2 cell lines of the same type each expressing distinct receptors. Screening using these multiplexed assays produced significant savings in reagents, time, and human resources and allowed the authors to quickly identify specific and selective hits.  相似文献   

8.
High-throughput screening (HTS) has become an important part of drug discovery at most pharmaceutical and many biotechnology companies worldwide, and use of HTS technologies is expanding into new areas. Target validation, assay development, secondary screening, ADME/Tox, and lead optimization are among the areas in which there is an increasing use of HTS technologies. It is becoming fully integrated within drug discovery, both upstream and downstream, which includes increasing use of cell-based assays and high-content screening (HCS) technologies to achieve more physiologically relevant results and to find higher quality leads. In addition, HTS laboratories are continually evaluating new technologies as they struggle to increase their success rate for finding drug candidates. The material in this article is based on a 900-page HTS industry report involving 54 HTS directors representing 58 HTS laboratories and 34 suppliers.  相似文献   

9.
Over the past years, improvements in high-throughput screening (HTS) technology and compound libraries have resulted in a dramatic increase in the amounts of good-quality screening hits, and there is a growing need for follow-on hit profiling assays with medium throughput to further triage hits. Here the authors present such assays for the colony-stimulating factor 1 receptor (CSF1R, Fms), including tests for cellular activity and a homogeneous assay to measure affinity for inactive CSF1R. They also present a high-throughput assay to measure target residence time, which is based on competitive binding kinetics. To better fit k(off) rates, they present a modified mathematical model for competitive kinetics. In all assays, they profiled eight reference inhibitors (imatinib, sorafenib, sunitinib, tandutinib, dasatinib, GW2580, Ki20227, and J&J's pyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidin-5-one). Using the known biochemical selectivities of these inhibitors, which can be quantified using metrics such as the selectivity entropy, the authors have determined which assay readout best predicts hit selectivity. Their profiling shows surprisingly that imatinib has a preference for the active form of CSF1R and that Ki20227 has an unusually slow target dissociation rate. This confirms that follow-on hit profiling is essential to ensure that the best hits are selected for lead optimization.  相似文献   

10.
A typical modern high-throughput screening (HTS) operation consists of testing thousands of chemical compounds to select active ones for future detailed examination. The authors describe 3 clustering techniques that can be used to improve the selection of active compounds (i.e., hits). They are designed to identify quality hits in the observed HTS measurements. The considered clustering techniques were first tested on simulated data and then applied to analyze the assay inhibiting Escherichia coli dihydrofo-late reductase produced at the HTS laboratory of McMaster University.  相似文献   

11.
Frequent hitters are compounds that are detected as a "hit" in multiple high-throughput screening (HTS) assays. Such behavior is specific (e.g., target family related) or unspecific (e.g., reactive compounds) or can result from a combination of such behaviors. Detecting such hits while predicting the underlying reason behind their promiscuous behavior is desirable because it provides valuable information not only about the compounds themselves but also about the assay methodology and target classes at hand. This information can also greatly reduce cost and time during HTS hit profiling. The present study exemplifies how to mine large HTS data repositories, such as the one at Boehringer Ingelheim, to identify frequent hitters, gain further insights into the causes of promiscuous behavior, and generate models for predicting promiscuous compounds. Applications of this approach are demonstrated using two recent large-scale HTS assays. The authors believe this analysis and its concrete applications are valuable tools for streamlining and accelerating decision-making processes during the course of hit discovery.  相似文献   

12.
High-throughput screening (HTS), a major component of lead identification, often utilizes fluorescence-based assay technologies. For example, HTS kinase assays are formatted using a variety of fluorescence-based assay technologies including, but not limited to, dissociation enhanced lanthanide fluoroimmunoassay (DELFIA), time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET), and fluorescence polarization (FP). These assays offer tremendous advantages such as a nonradioactive format, ease of automation, and excellent reproducibility. Fluorescence-based assays frequently used for lead identification can also be useful for structure activity relationship (SAR) studies during lead optimization. An important issue when assessing an assay to be used for SAR is the ability of the assay to discriminate high-affinity small molecule inhibitors (pM-nM) from low-affinity inhibitors (microM-mM). The purpose of this study was to utilize HTS-friendly assay formats for SAR by developing TR-FRET, FP, and DELFIAassays measuring Src kinase activity and to define the theoretical lower limit of small molecule inhibitor detection achievable with these assay formats. The authors show that 2 homogeneous assay formats, TR-FRET and FP, allowed for the development of Src kinase assays with a lower limit of detection of K(i) = 0.01 nM. This study indicates that assay technologies typically used for HTS can be used during lead optimization by providing quantitative measurements of compound activity critical to driving SAR studies.  相似文献   

13.
Miniaturization of high-throughput screening (HTS) assays has several obvious advantages, including increased throughput and lower cost by reduction in reagent consumption. Although absorbance assays are widely used in research laboratories, their application for HTS in a low-volume format has been met with mixed success because they are difficult to miniaturize. Challenges for the miniaturization of absorbance assays include low signal due to short path lengths and meniscus distortions in small well sizes. Here we describe a method to miniaturize absorbance assays to standard, white, low-volume 384-well and 1536-well microplates using a fluorometric plate reader for detection. The premise of this absorbance assay is based on the fluorescent properties of white microplates and the ability of a colored product to quench the fluorescence signal from the plate by absorbing either the excitation light or the emission light. This method was applied to the detection of inorganic phosphate using Quinaldine red and Malachite green dyes and to the monitoring of alkaline phosphatase hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate. These assays can be carried out in low volumes, give robust screening statistics, and can be accomplished with a simple, inexpensive fluorometric plate reader.  相似文献   

14.
High-throughput screening (HTS) has become an integral part of academic and industrial efforts aimed at developing new chemical probes and drugs. These screens typically generate several 'hits', or lead active compounds, that must be prioritized for follow-up medicinal chemistry studies. Among primary considerations for ranking lead compounds is selectivity for the intended target, especially among mechanistically related proteins. Here, we show how the chemical proteomic technology activity-based protein profiling (ABPP) can serve as a universal assay to rank HTS hits based on their selectivity across many members of an enzyme superfamily. As a case study, four metalloproteinase-13 (MMP13) inhibitors of similar potency originating from a publically supported HTS and reported in PubChem were tested by ABPP for selectivity against a panel of 27 diverse metalloproteases. The inhibitors could be readily separated into two groups: (1) those that were active against several metalloproteases and (2) those that showed high selectivity for MMP13. The latter set of inhibitors was thereby designated as more suitable for future medicinal chemistry optimization. We anticipate that ABPP will find general utility as a platform to rank the selectivity of lead compounds emerging from HTS assays for a wide variety of enzymes.  相似文献   

15.
The selection of the highest quality chemical matter from high throughput screening (HTS) is the ultimate aim of any triage process. Typically there are many hundreds or thousands of hits capable of modulating a given biological target in HTS with a wide range of physicochemical properties that should be taken into consideration during triage. Given the multitude of physicochemical properties that define drug-like space, a system needs to be in place that allows for a rapid selection of chemical matter based on a prioritized range of these properties. With this goal in mind, we have developed a tool, coined Abbott Physicochemical Tiering (APT) that enables hit prioritization based on ranges of these important physicochemical properties. This tool is now used routinely at Abbott to help prioritize hits out of HTS during the triage process. Herein we describe how this tool was developed and validated using Abbott internal high throughput ADME data (HT-ADME).  相似文献   

16.
High-throughput screening (HTS) of large-scale RNA interference (RNAi) libraries has become an increasingly popular method of functional genomics in recent years. Cell-based assays used for RNAi screening often produce small dynamic ranges and significant variability because of the combination of cellular heterogeneity, transfection efficiency, and the intrinsic nature of the genes being targeted. These properties make reliable hit selection in the RNAi screen a difficult task. The use of robust methods based on median and median absolute deviation (MAD) has been suggested to improve hit selection in such cases, but mean and standard deviation (SD)-based methods are still predominantly used in many RNAi HTS. In an experimental approach to compare these 2 methods, a genome-scale small interfering RNA (siRNA) screen was performed, in which the identification of novel targets increasing the therapeutic index of the chemotherapeutic agent mitomycin C (MMC) was sought. MAD values were resistant to the presence of outliers, and the hits selected by the MAD-based method included all the hits that would be selected by SD-based method as well as a significant number of additional hits. When retested in triplicate, a similar percentage of these siRNAs were shown to genuinely sensitize cells to MMC compared with the hits shared between SD- and MAD-based methods. Confirmed hits were enriched with the genes involved in the DNA damage response and cell cycle regulation, validating the overall hit selection strategy. Finally, computer simulations showed the superiority and generality of the MAD-based method in various RNAi HTS data models. In conclusion, the authors demonstrate that the MAD-based hit selection method rescued physiologically relevant false negatives that would have been missed in the SD-based method, and they believe it to be the desirable 1st-choice hit selection method for RNAi screen results.  相似文献   

17.
High-throughput screening (HTS), systematically testing thousands of small molecules to find candidates for lead optimization, primarily involves exposure of purified proteins to arrayed collections of small molecules. More complex phenotypic assays, such as cell-based or whole-organism assays, traditionally have flanked HTS, preceding it to validate new therapeutic targets, and following it to characterize new lead compounds in cellular contexts. Recently, however, cell- and organism-based phenotypic assays have increasingly been adopted as a primary screening platform for annotating small molecules.  相似文献   

18.
Homogeneous time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) assays represent a highly sensitive and robust high-throughput screening (HTS) method for the quantification of kinase activity. Traditional TR-FRET kinase assays detect the phosphorylation of an exogenous substrate. The authors describe the development and optimization of a TR-FRET technique that measures the autophosphorylation of vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 2 (VEGFR-2) kinase and extend its applicability to a variety of other kinases. The VEGFR-2 assay demonstrated dose-dependent inhibition by compounds known to modulate the catalytic activity of this receptor. In addition, kinetic analysis of a previously characterized VEGFR-2 inhibitor was performed using the method, and results were consistent with those obtained using a different assay format. Because of the known involvement of VEGFR-2 in angiogenesis, this assay should facilitate HTS for antiangiogenic agents. In addition, this general technique should have utility for the screening for inhibitors of kinases as potential therapeutic agents for many other disease indications.  相似文献   

19.
MraY is an established target for the discovery of antibacterial agents. The conventional assay for MraY uses radioactive substrate and analysis of products after paper chromatography or butanol extraction. Synthesis of radiolabeled substrate has been done in vitro using purified enzymes or by growing cells on radiolabeled precursors. The authors report a simple and rapid method to chemically radiolabel MraY substrate, UDP-MurNAc-pentapeptide. Specific activity obtained by this method was more than 100 times higher than the conventionally labeled substrate, and yields are high enough to support the requirements of high-throughput screening (HTS). The authors have developed a microplate-based homogeneous assay for MraY in which the product is captured on wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) scintillation proximity assay (SPA) beads. The assay was validated by showing inhibition by specific inhibitors of MraY but not by inhibitors of other enzymes of peptidoglycan synthesis. The assay uses wild-type membranes of Escherichia coli, giving it an advantage over recently described assays that need the protein to be overexpressed. In addition, it has an advantage over the high-throughput MraY-MurG coupled assay reported in the literature because it is MraY specific, and therefore hits obtained in this assay do not need further deconvolution. It has potential for use in HTS approaches to find novel inhibitors of MraY.  相似文献   

20.
Microbial HTS has been implemented at Rh?ne-Poulenc Rorer through the development of a dedicated robotic platform. This robot (Turbo) has been designed with the aim of fully integrating microbial HTS into the lead discovery processes. Innovative solutions have been found to reach high throughput as well as flexibility. This opens up new prospects for solid-phase microbial screening, taking advantage of the easy implementation and the very low costs of such screens. The different types of microbial screens done in our laboratory, as well as the throughputs and outputs obtained, are described. Some of the specific aspects of microbial HTS, as compared to biochemical and cell-based assays, are also discussed.  相似文献   

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