| Literature DB >> 34723213 |
Anthony C Varca1,2, Dominick Casalena3, Douglas Auld3, Sara J Buhrlage1,2.
Abstract
Identification of selective deubiquitinase (DUB) inhibitors is critical for probe development to further understand and explore DUB biological function. Here, we detail the optimization and deployment of an in vitro fluorogenic ubiquitin-rhodamine assay to conduct high-throughput screening of a small molecule library against a panel of DUBs. In screening the compound library against multiple DUBs in parallel, we describe an approach for identifying selective DUB inhibitors and provide a roadmap for enabling selective DUB inhibitor discovery. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Varca et al. (2021).Entities:
Keywords: High Throughput Screening; Molecular/Chemical Probes; Protein Biochemistry; Protein expression and purification
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34723213 PMCID: PMC8536791 DOI: 10.1016/j.xpro.2021.100896
Source DB: PubMed Journal: STAR Protoc ISSN: 2666-1667
Variable conditions for design of experiment (DOE) buffer testing
| Variables | Conditions |
|---|---|
| Buffer | HEPES, Tris |
| pH | 7, 7.5, 8 |
| NaCl concentration | 0, 25, 50 mM |
| BSA concentration | 0, 1% |
| EDTA concentration | 0, 1 mM |
| Detergent | CHAPS, Tween20, PF127, NP-40, Triton-X |
| Detergent concentration | 0×, 0.25×, 0.5× critical micellar concentration (CMC) |
| Reducing agent | DTT, TCEP |
| Reducing agent concentration | 0, 1 mM |
Figure 1General workflow for primary and dose-response screens
Prior to beginning the screening process, DUB and ubiquitin-rhodamine (Ub-Rho) solutions are prepared in assay buffer and compound source plates are prepared from DMSO stocks. Step 1: Compounds are added from source plates to 1536 well assay plates in single concentrations (for primary screen) or in either 4 or 8-point dose-response (for dose-response screens). Columns 45–46 contain DMSO only as a neutral control. Step 2: A 2x solution of DUB in assay buffer is then added to all wells on the plate except columns 47–48 (which receive only assay buffer). Step 3: A 2x solution of Ub-Rho is then added to all wells on the plate. Step 4: Plates are then incubated to allow the DUB enzymatic reaction to occur. Step 5: Fluorescence measurements for each plate are then recorded using a fluorescence plate reader followed by data analysis.
Example data and data processing from the dose response of a compound from the small molecule library against USP7
| Compound (μM) | Raw fluorescence | Percent DUB activity ((fluorescence – NC)/(AC – NC)) ∗100∗−1 |
|---|---|---|
| 40 | 11190 | −93.97 |
| 12.66 | 34769 | −74.58 |
| 4 | 80793 | −36.73 |
| 1.266 | 107757 | −14.55 |
| 0.4 | 112614 | −10.56 |
| 0.126 | 112856 | −10.36 |
| 0.04 | 119232 | −5.11 |
| 0.012 | 114746 | −8.80 |
| DMSO (Neutral control, NC) | 125451.5 | 0 |
| No enzyme (Active control, AC) | 3853 | −100 |
The calculation for Percent DUB activity was multiplied by −1 to represent the active control median being −100% (inhibitory effect).
Figure 2Inhibition curve of normalized fluorescence data
Dose-response curve of normalized fluorescence data from Table 2.
| REAGENT or RESOURCE | SOURCE | IDENTIFIER |
|---|---|---|
| NEB® 10-beta Competent | New England Biolabs Inc | Cat#C3019H |
| BL21(DE3) Competent | New England Biolabs Inc | Cat#C2527H |
| Isopropyl β-D-1-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) | UBP Bio | Cat#P1010-100 |
| β-Mercaptoethanol | Sigma-Aldrich | Cat#M3148-25ML |
| Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) | RPI | Cat#P20270-25.0 |
| Ampicillin sodium salt | Fisher Scientific | Cat#BP1760-25 |
| Kanamycin sulfate, ultrapure | Thermo Scientific | Cat# J1792414 |
| Ubiquitin-Rhodamine 110 (Ub-Rho) | R&D Systems | Cat#U-555-050 |
| Primary and dose response confirmation screening data | PubChem | |
| pOPINK-OTUD3 (OTU+UBA, aa 52-275) | ( | Addgene plasmid# 61411 |
| pET28aLIC-USP7 (His-tagged, aa 207-532) | ( | N/A |
| pET28aLIC-USP8 (His-tagged, aa 742-1110) | ( | N/A |
| pET28PP-USP10 (His-tagged, aa 376-798) | ( | N/A |
| pET28b-USP17 (His-tagged, aa 1-530) | ( | N/A |
| pET28a USP25 (His-tagged, aa 207-532) | ( | N/A |
| pET28aLIC-USP28 (His-tagged, aa 207-532) | ( | N/A |
| pET28PP-USP30 (His-tagged, aa 207-532) | ( | N/A |
| pGEX6P1-UCHL1 (GST-tagged, aa 1-223) | ( | N/A |
| Prism 8 | GraphPad | |
| JMP | SAS Institute | RRID:SCR_014242 |
| Ni-NTA Agarose | QIAGEN | Cat#30210 |
| Pierce™ Glutathione Superflow Agarose | Thermo Scientific | Cat#25237 |
| QIAprep Spin Miniprep Kit | QIAGEN | Cat#27104 |
| Amicon® Ultra-15 Centrifugal Filter Unit | Millipore Sigma | Cat#UFC903024 |
| Fisher Scientific Model 505 Sonic Dismembrator | Fisher Scientific | Cat#FB505 |
| NanoDrop 2000 | Thermo Scientific | Cat#ND-2000 |
| 384-Well plates | Greiner | Cat#784201 |
| 1536-Well plates | Greiner | Cat#782076 |
| Echo | Labcyte | Cat#ECHO555 |
| Multidrop™ Combi Reagent Dispenser | Thermo Fisher Scientific | Cat#5840300 |
| PHERAstar | BMG Labtech | Cat#PHERAstarFSX |
| Tecan Freedom EVO 200 | Tecan | Cat#Freedom EVO 200 |
| TEMPEST liquid handler | Formulatrix | Cat#TEMPEST |
Assay Buffer for DUB HTS
| Reagent | Stock concentration | Final concentration | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tris pH 8 | 1 M | 50 mM | 50 mL |
| NaCl | 5 M | 50 mM | 10 mL |
| Tween20 | 10% | 0.002% | 200 μL |
| DTT | 1 M | 5 mM | 5 mL |
| H2O | – | – | 934.8 mL |
| – | – |
Assay buffer was prepared fresh for each experiment. DTT as a 1 M stock solution was stored at 4°C, other reagents were stored at 20°C–25°C.
STOP buffer for DUB HTS
| Reagent | Stock concentration | Final concentration | Volume |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) | 10% | 0.2% | 8.4 mL |
| Assay buffer | – | – | 131.6 mL |
| – | – |
STOP buffer should be prepared fresh for each experiment.