The expansion of kinase assay technologies over the past decade has mirrored the growing interest in kinases as drug targets. As a result, there is no shortage of convenient, fluorescence-based methods available to assay targets that span the kinome. The authors recently reported on the development of a non-activity-based assay to characterize kinase inhibitors that depended on displacement of an Alexa Fluor 647 conjugate of staurosporine (a "tracer") from a particular kinase. Kinase inhibitors were characterized by a change in fluorescence lifetime of the tracer when it was bound to a kinase relative to when it was displaced by an inhibitor. Here, the authors report on improvements to this strategy by reconfiguring the assay in a time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) format that simplifies instrumentation requirements and allows for the use of a substantially lower concentration of kinase than was required in the fluorescence-lifetime-based format. The authors use this new assay to demonstrate several aspects of the binding assay format that are advantageous relative to traditional activity-based assays. The TR-FRET binding format facilitates the assay of compounds against lowactivity kinases, allows for the characterization of type II kinase inhibitors either using nonactivated kinases or by monitoring compound potency over time, and ensures that the signal being detected is specific to the kinase of interest and not a contaminating kinase. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2009:924-935)
The human pregnane X nuclear receptor (PXR) is a xenobioticregulated receptor that is activated by a range of diverse chemicals, including antibiotics, antifungals, glucocorticoids, and
Highly miniaturized P450 screening assays designed to enable facile analysis of P450 drug interactions in a 1536-well plate format with the principal human cytochrome P450 enzymes (CYP3A4, 2D6, 2C9, 2C19, and 1A2) and Vivid ® fluorogenic substrates were developed. The detailed characterization of the assays included stability, homogeneity, and reproducibility of the recombinant P450 enzymes and the kinetic parameters of their reactions with Vivid ® fluorogenic substrates, with a focus on the specific characteristics of each component that enable screening in a low-volume 1536-well plate assay format. The screening assays were applied for the assessment of individual cytochrome P450 inhibition profiles with a panel of selected assay modifiers, including isozyme-specific substrates and inhibitors. IC 50 values obtained for the modifiers in 96-and 1536-well plate formats were similar and comparable with values obtained in assays with conventional substrates. An overall examination of the 1536-well assay statistics, such as signal-to-background ratio and Z′ factor, demonstrated that these assays are a robust, successful, and reliable tool to screen for cytochrome P450 metabolism and inhibition in an ultra-high-throughput screening format. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2005:56-66)
The life-threatening consequences of acquired, or drug-induced, long QT syndrome due to block of the human ether-a-go-go-related gene (hERG) channel are well appreciated and have been the cause of several drugs being removed from the market in recent years because of patient death. In the last decade, the propensity for block of the hERG channel by a diverse and expanding set of compounds has led to the requirement that all new drugs be tested for hERG channel block in a functional patch-clamp assay. Because of the need to identify potential hERG blockers early in the discovery process, radiometric hERG binding assays are preferred over patch-clamp assays for compound triage, because of relative advantages in speed and cost. Even so, these radiometric binding assays are laborious and require dedicated instrumentation and infrastructure to cope with the regulatory and safety issues associated with the use of radiation. To overcome these limitations, we developed a homogeneous, fluorescence polarization-based assay to identify and characterize the affinity of small molecules for the hERG channel and have demonstrated tight correlation with data obtained from either radioligand binding or patch-clamp assays. Key to the development of this assay was a cell line that expressed highly elevated levels of hERG protein, which was generated by coupling expression of the hERG channel to that of a selectable cell surface marker. A high-expressing clone was isolated by flow cytometry and used to generate membrane preparations that contained >50-fold the typical density of hERG channels measured by [(3)H]astemizole binding. This strategy enabled the Predictor (Invitrogen, Carlsbad, CA) hERG fluorescence polarization assay and should be useful in the development of other fluorescence polarization-based assays that use membrane proteins.
The interactions of the ligand binding domain (LBD) of androgen receptor (AR) and the AR T877A mutant, found in prostate cancer, with peptides from coactivator and corepressor proteins or random phage display peptides were investigated using in vitro time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET). Interaction of wild-type AR LBD with the random phage display peptide D11FxxLF was observed with dihydrotestosterone (DHT), testosterone, R1881, estradiol, spironolactone, progesterone, and cortisol resulting in distinct dose dependency (EC50) values for each ligand and correlating well with the reported rank order potency of these agonists. Increasing concentrations of cyproterone acetate and mifepristone resulted in more complete disruption of the DHT-mediated AR-D11FxxLF peptide interaction, while flutamide, hydroxyflutamide, and bicalutamide caused only partial disruption of the complex. The mutant AR T877A LBD exhibited increased binding affinities for all ligands tested except for bicalutamide, mifepristone, DHT, and R1881 in a competitive binding assay as compared to wild-type AR LBD. This mutation was also characterized by increased ligand potency for agonist-induced peptide recruitment. Although usually an antagonist, hydroxyflutamide was more potent in the recruitment of D11FxxLF or an SRC3-1 LXXLL motif to AR T877A LBD than AR LBD. The antagonist cyproterone acetate behaved as a full antagonist of D11FxxLF recruitment to AR LBD and AR T877A LBD but as a more potent agonist in the recruitment of SRC3-1 to AR T877A LBD. These results suggest that the AR T877A mutation affects both ligand affinity and ligand dose dependency for peptide recruitment and may explain in part the altered responses of antagonists and increased transcriptional activation reported in androgen-independent prostate cancers.
The DPX-2 cell line, a derivative of HepG2 cells, harbors human PXR and a luciferase-linked CYP3A4 promoter. These cells were used in a panel of cell-based assays for a parallel assessment of CYP3A4 induction, metabolism, and inhibition at the cellular level. CYP3A4 induction in the DPX-2 cell line by various agents was monitored in 96-well plates by a luciferase-based transcriptional activation assay. Of the prototypical CYP3A4 inducers examined, all exhibited elevated luciferase activity in DPX-2 cells. CYP3A4 enzyme activity in noninduced and rifampicin-induced DPX-2 cells was also assessed using Vivid fluorogenic substrates. Significantly elevated CYP3A4 activity levels (2.8-fold ± 0.2-fold above DMSO-treated cells) were found in DPX-2 cells after 48 hours of exposure to rifampicin, but were undetectable in parental HepG2 cells. Rifampicin-induced activity levels were found to be suitable for assessing the inhibitory potential of new chemical entities in downstream CYP3A4 inhibition assays. The elevated CYP3A4 activity was inhibited 85% by 10 µM ketoconazole. In addition, a cytotoxicity assay to correct for possible toxic effects of compounds at the cellular level was applied. The comparative data obtained with a combination of the above assays suggests that the application of several independent in vitro technologies used in DPX-2 cells is the best possible strategy for the assessment of the complex phenomena of CYP3A4 induction and inhibition.
The imatinib paradigm in chronic myeloid leukemia (CML) established continuous BCR-ABL inhibition as a design principle for ABL tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs). However, clinical responses seen in patients treated with the ABL TKI dasatinib despite its much shorter plasma half-life and the apparent rapid restoration of BCR-ABL signaling activity following once-daily dosing suggested acute, potent inhibition of kinase activity may be sufficient to irrevocably commit CML cells to apoptosis. To determine the specific requirements for ABL TKI-induced CML cell death for a panel of clinically important ABL TKIs (imatinib, nilotinib, dasatinib, ponatinib, and DCC-2036), we interrogated response of CML cell lines and primary CML cells following acute drug exposure using intracellular FACS and immunoblot analyses of BCR-ABL signaling, apoptosis measurements, liquid chromatography/tandem mass spectrometry of intracellular drug levels, and biochemical TKI dissociation studies. Importantly, significant intracellular TKI stores were detected following drug washout, levels of which tracked with onset of apoptosis and incomplete return of BCR-ABL signaling, particularly pSTAT5, to baseline. Among TKIs tested, ponatinib demonstrated the most robust capacity for apoptotic commitment showing sustained suppression of BCR-ABL signaling even at low intracellular levels following extensive washout, consistent with high-affinity binding and slow dissociation from ABL kinase. Together, our findings suggest commitment of CML cells to apoptosis requires protracted incomplete restoration of BCR-ABL signaling mediated by intracellular retention of TKIs above a quantifiable threshold. These studies refine our understanding of apoptotic commitment in CML cells and highlight parameters important to design of therapeutic kinase inhibitors for CML and other malignancies.
Large-scale screening of multiple compound libraries and combinatorial libraries for pharmacological activity is one of the novel approaches of the modern drug discovery process. The application of isozyme-specific high-throughput screening (HTS) assays for characterizing the interactions of potential drug candidates with major human drug-metabolizing cytochrome p450 enzymes (p450s) is newly becoming an essential part of this process. Fluorescence-based HTS assays have been successfully employed for in vitro assessment of drug-drug interactions and enzyme inhibition with several p450 isoforms, including CYP3A4, CYP2D6, CYP2C9, and CYP2C19. Here we describe a fluorescence-based HTS assay for detecting drug metabolism and inhibition with human CYP2E1. CYP2E1 plays an important role in the metabolism of several drugs, many solvents, and toxins and therefore has been repeatedly linked to numerous pathologies, including cancer, liver and kidney toxicity, diabetes, and alcoholism. The assay is based on the ability of a drug to compete with the fluorogenic Vivid CYP2E1 Blue Substrate for CYP2E1 metabolism and thus enables rapid screening of lead molecules for their inhibitory potential. We have used this assay to screen a panel of drugs and compounds for their effects on CYP2E1 metabolism and inhibition. Our results demonstrate the assay's usefulness in identifying CYP2E1 substrates and inhibitors and in enabling in-depth characterization of their interactions with the CYP2E1 isozyme. We also present detailed characteristics of the assay, including its dynamic range and Z'-factor values, which indicate that this robust assay is well suited for kinetic and inhibition studies in HTS formats.
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