| Literature DB >> 24371213 |
Kenji Schorpp1, Ina Rothenaigner1, Elena Salmina2, Jeanette Reinshagen3, Terence Low3, Jara K Brenke1, Jay Gopalakrishnan4, Igor V Tetko5, Sheraz Gul3, Kamyar Hadian6.
Abstract
Although small-molecule drug discovery efforts have focused largely on enzyme, receptor, and ion-channel targets, there has been an increase in such activities to search for protein-protein interaction (PPI) disruptors by applying high-throughout screening (HTS)-compatible protein-binding assays. However, a disadvantage of these assays is that many primary hits are frequent hitters regardless of the PPI being investigated. We have used the AlphaScreen technology to screen four different robust PPI assays each against 25,000 compounds. These activities led to the identification of 137 compounds that demonstrated repeated activity in all PPI assays. These compounds were subsequently evaluated in two AlphaScreen counter assays, leading to classification of compounds that either interfered with the AlphaScreen chemistry (60 compounds) or prevented the binding of the protein His-tag moiety to nickel chelate (Ni(2+)-NTA) beads of the AlphaScreen detection system (77 compounds). To further triage the 137 frequent hitters, we subsequently confirmed by a time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer assay that most of these compounds were only frequent hitters in AlphaScreen assays. A chemoinformatics analysis of the apparent hits provided details of the compounds that can be flagged as frequent hitters of the AlphaScreen technology, and these data have broad applicability for users of these detection technologies.Entities:
Keywords: AlphaScreen; assay development; drug discovery; frequent hitter; high-throughput screening; protein-protein interaction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24371213 PMCID: PMC4153540 DOI: 10.1177/1087057113516861
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol Screen ISSN: 1087-0571
Figure 1.Pictorial overview of the workflow implemented in the study. Data for four independent AlphaScreen high-throughput screening primary assays were selected for analysis and identification of AlphaScreen-FH as well as AlphaScreen-His-FH. The specific anonymized protein-protein interaction (PPI) pairs (PROTEIN(1)-GST/PROTEIN(2)-His, PROTEIN(3)-StrepTagII/PROTEIN(4)-His, PROTEIN(5)-His/PROTEIN(6)-Myc, PROTEIN(7)-Biotin/PROTEIN(8)-His) were screened against a diverse library of 25,000 compounds (each PPI pair comprised one His-tagged protein). All small molecules that led to a decrease in the AlphaScreen signal >50% were classified as hits. Combinatorial analysis of all four screening campaigns allowed the identification of frequent hitters. With appropriate counter screening assays, frequent hitters were differentiated by AlphaScreen-FH and AlphaScreen-His-FH. These data formed the basis for new substructure filter tools to annotate promiscuous screening compounds within screening libraries.
Figure 2.The output of four AlphaScreen primary high-throughput screening (HTS) assays selected for this study. (A–D) The four protein-protein interaction (PPI) pairs produced excellent and robust signals (Z′ > 0.5). The first bar in each panel shows the AlphaScreen signal of the wild-type (wt) protein pairs. The second bar depicts the reduced signal coming from a protein-binding mutant (mut). (E–H) Scatterplots of the four HTS campaigns. The PPI pairs were screened against a diverse library of 25,000 compounds. Inactive compounds are marked in gray. Comparison of all four screening campaigns allowed the distinction of specific Hits (green) and frequent hitters (red). Dn, donor bead; Ac, acceptor bead; P, PROTEIN.
Figure 3.The output of the AlphaScreen confirmation and counter assays. (A) In total, 137 compounds were cherry-picked and reconfirmed as frequent hitters in the primary PROTEIN(7)-Biotin/PROTEIN(8)-His assay (red). Control treatment was set to 100%. (B) The identical compounds were subsequently investigated for their activity against the AlphaScreen technology using the TruHits counter assay. Combining the results from A and B enabled the classification of frequent hitters into AlphaScreen-FH (light blue) and AlphaScreen-His-FH (dark blue). (C, D) Two compounds from each of the classified groups were selected and retested in dose-response experiments (13-point dose-response, n = 3) using the assay shown in A and B.
Figure 4.Time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) counter assay. (A) The TR-FRET counter assay was performed at optimal concentrations of all reagents. All 137 compounds from were analyzed for interference with the TR-FRET technology. A linear fusion protein (GST-His) produced a robust TR-FRET signal. Control treatment was set to 100%. One compound also causing a reduction of the TR-FRET signal is marked in blue and is classified as a TR-FRET frequent hitter (TR-FRET-FH). (B) The four compounds tested in AlphaScreen dose-response (, ) were also evaluated in TR-FRET dose-response assays. (C) The TR-FRET-FH identified in A exhibited a sigmoidal dose-dependent reduction of TR-FRET signal.
Figure 5.Possible mechanism of action of 18 AlphaScreen-His-FH sharing the same common molecular fragment. (A) The common molecular fragment for 18 AlphaScreen-His-FH. (B) Examples of molecular trimers formed by the fragment and NH-donating azoles according to Tetko et al.[15] and SMARTS.[19] (C) Hypothetical hydrogen bond interaction of the fragment with the PROTEIN-His-tag. (D) Hypothetical chelating complexes formed by the fragment with Ni2+-ions covering an acceptor bead surface (dashed lines show interactions).
Numbers of Compounds and Enrichment Values Calculated with Different Filters Applied to Screen HMGU and PubChem Data Sets.
| HMGU | PubChem | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| FH Type | Reference | No. of Filters | Active in 2–4 Assays (FH) | Nonactive in All Assays | Enrichment Value, % | Active in 1–3[ | Nonactive in All Assays | Enrichment Value, % |
| PC | 20 | 178 | 6 | 286 | 2.1 | 349 | 13,114 | 2.6 |
| PAINS | 13 | 480 | 74 | 807 | 9.2 | 1217 | 14,270 | 8.5 |
| CFL-1 | 35 | 56 | 12 | 183 | 6.6 | 452 | 4891 | 9.2 |
| AlphaScreen-His-FH | This study | 19 | 92 | 220 | 42 | 534 | 1475 | 36 |
| AlphaScreen-FH | This study | 6 | 9 | 14 | 64 | 0 | 8 | NA |
FH, frequent hitter; NA, not available.
Due to the limited number of assays (n = 3) in PubChem, we also counted compounds active in only one assay as frequent hitters for the enrichment value (EV) calculation. The HMGU (Helmholtz Zentrum München für Gesundheit und Umwelt) data were the same four assays used for the development of the filters.