| Literature DB >> 26861708 |
Michael Finley1, Jason Cassaday2, Tony Kreamer2, Xinnian Li2, Kelli Solly2, Greg O'Donnell2, Michelle Clements3, Antonella Converso4, Sean Cook5, Chris Daley3, Richard Kraus3, Ming-Tain Lai3, Mark Layton4, Wei Lemaire3, Donnette Staas6, Jixin Wang3.
Abstract
The NaV1.7 voltage-gated sodium channel is a highly valued target for the treatment of neuropathic pain due to its expression in pain-sensing neurons and human genetic mutations in the gene encoding NaV1.7, resulting in either loss-of-function (e.g., congenital analgesia) or gain-of-function (e.g., paroxysmal extreme pain disorder) pain phenotypes. We exploited existing technologies in a novel manner to identify selective antagonists of NaV1.7. A full-deck high-throughput screen was developed for both NaV1.7 and cardiac NaV1.5 channels using a cell-based membrane potential dye FLIPR assay. In assay development, known local anesthetic site inhibitors produced a decrease in maximal response; however, a subset of compounds exhibited a concentration-dependent delay in the onset of the response with little change in the peak of the response at any concentration. Therefore, two methods of analysis were employed for the screen: one to measure peak response and another to measure area under the curve, which would capture the delay-to-onset phenotype. Although a number of compounds were identified by a selective reduction in peak response in NaV1.7 relative to 1.5, the AUC measurement and a subsequent refinement of this measurement were able to differentiate compounds with NaV1.7 pharmacological selectivity over NaV1.5 as confirmed in electrophysiology.Entities:
Keywords: high-throughput screen; membrane potential; sodium channel
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26861708 DOI: 10.1177/1087057116629669
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomol Screen ISSN: 1087-0571