Literature DB >> 17130249

Microplate orbital mixing improves high-throughput cell-based reporter assay readouts.

Michael K Hancock1, Myleen N Medina, Brendan M Smith, Anthony P Orth.   

Abstract

Reporter assays are commonly used for high-throughput cell-based screening of compounds, cDNAs, and siRNAs due to robust signal, ease of miniaturization, and simple detection and analysis. Among the most widely used reporter genes is the bioluminescent enzyme luciferase, which, when exposed to its substrate luciferin upon cell lysis, yields linear signal over a dynamic range of several orders of magnitude. Commercially available luciferase assay formulations have been developed permitting homogeneous, single-step cell lysis and reporter activity measurements. Assay conditions employed with these formulations are typically designed to minimize well-to-well luminescence variability due to variability in dispensing, evaporation, and incomplete sample mixing. The authors demonstrate that incorporating a microplate orbital mixing step into 96- and 384-well microplate cell-based luciferase reporter assays can greatly improve reporter readouts. They have found that orbital mixing using commercially available mixers facilitates maximal luciferase signal generation from high cell density-containing samples while minimizing variability due to partial cell lysis, thereby improving assay precision. The authors fully expect that widespread availability of mixers with sufficiently small orbits and higher speed settings will permit gains in signal and precision in the 1536-well format as well.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 17130249     DOI: 10.1177/1087057106296046

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomol Screen        ISSN: 1087-0571


  3 in total

1.  Evaporative preconcentration of fluorescent protein samples in capillary based microplates.

Authors:  Fenfen Shao; Tuck Wah Ng; Jonathan Kok Keung Lye; Oi Wah Liew
Journal:  J Fluoresc       Date:  2011-05-11       Impact factor: 2.217

2.  Automated high-throughput microchannel assays for cell biology: Operational optimization and characterization.

Authors:  John P Puccinelli; Xiaojing Su; David J Beebe
Journal:  JALA Charlottesv Va       Date:  2010-02-01

Review 3.  Marine invertebrate xenobiotic-activated nuclear receptors: their application as sensor elements in high-throughput bioassays for marine bioactive compounds.

Authors:  Ingrid Richter; Andrew E Fidler
Journal:  Mar Drugs       Date:  2014-11-24       Impact factor: 5.118

  3 in total

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