Miniaturization of a mammalian cell-based assay: Luciferase reporter gene readout in a 3 microliter 1536-well plate

被引:43
作者
Maffia, AM [1 ]
Kariv, I [1 ]
Oldenburg, KR [1 ]
机构
[1] DuPont Pharmaceut Co, Expt Stn, Wilmington, DE 19880 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1177/108705719900400307
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The combined efforts of the fields of combinatorial chemistry and genomics have significantly increased the number of compounds and therapeutic targets available for screening. The number of compounds will reach into the million range in the near future and provide vast chemical diversity for drug discovery. However, this reservoir of chemical diversity creates downstream hurdles for any screening effort. Properly examining this number of compounds increases investments dramatically, both in the number of dollars spent and amount of limited reagents depleted. Traditional HTS techniques, such as the use of 96-well microtiter plates, have paved the way for faster processing speeds, but are being rapidly overwhelmed by screening demands. Miniaturization of such assays will allow for greater throughput, while concurrently reducing cost. To date, miniaturization efforts have been most successfully applied to bacterial and soluble protein based assays. Questions about the ability to deliver microquantities of mammalian cells without disruption of the cell membrane and/or activation of stress responses have been raised. An assay has been developed in which a human T-cell screen has been adapted to a 1536-well plate format. Through the use of a luciferase reporter gene system, it is shown that a mammalian cell-based assay may be successfully performed in 3 mu l and potent inhibitors of the target of interest identified.
引用
收藏
页码:137 / 142
页数:6
相关论文
共 14 条
  • [1] CHEMILUMINESCENT AND BIOLUMINESCENT REPORTER GENE ASSAYS
    BRONSTEIN, I
    FORTIN, J
    STANLEY, PE
    STEWART, GSAB
    KRICKA, LJ
    [J]. ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY, 1994, 219 (02) : 169 - 181
  • [2] New technologies for high-throughput screening
    Burbaum, JJ
    Sigal, NH
    [J]. CURRENT OPINION IN CHEMICAL BIOLOGY, 1997, 1 (01) : 72 - 78
  • [3] The GDB(TM) Human Genome Database Anno 1997
    Fasman, KH
    Letovsky, SI
    Li, P
    Cottingham, RW
    Kingsbury, DT
    [J]. NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH, 1997, 25 (01) : 72 - 80
  • [4] APPLICATIONS OF COMBINATORIAL TECHNOLOGIES TO DRUG DISCOVERY .2. COMBINATORIAL ORGANIC-SYNTHESIS, LIBRARY SCREENING STRATEGIES, AND FUTURE-DIRECTIONS
    GORDON, EM
    BARRETT, RW
    DOWER, WJ
    FODOR, SPA
    GALLOP, MA
    [J]. JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY, 1994, 37 (10) : 1385 - 1401
  • [5] QUANTITATIVE-ANALYSIS OF SCHIZOPHYLLUM-COMMUNE METALLOPROTEASE SCPRB ACTIVITY IN SDS-GELATIN PAGE REVEALS DIFFERENTIAL MYCELIAL LOCALIZATION OF NITROGEN LIMITATION-INDUCED AUTOLYSIS
    GORDON, LJ
    LILLY, WW
    [J]. CURRENT MICROBIOLOGY, 1995, 30 (06) : 337 - 343
  • [6] Hill D C, 1998, Curr Opin Drug Discov Devel, V1, P92
  • [7] KNEBEL G, 1998, HIGH THROUGHPUT SCRE, P22
  • [8] TOWARD A CDNA MAP OF THE HUMAN GENOME
    KORENBERG, JR
    CHEN, XN
    ADAMS, MD
    VENTER, JC
    [J]. GENOMICS, 1995, 29 (02) : 364 - 370
  • [9] Assay miniaturization for ultra-high throughput screening of combinatorial and discrete compound libraries: A 9600-well (0.2 microliter) assay system
    Oldenburg, KR
    Zhang, JH
    Chen, TM
    Maffia, A
    Blom, KF
    Combs, AP
    Chung, TDY
    [J]. JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR SCREENING, 1998, 3 (01) : 55 - 62
  • [10] OLDENBURG KR, 1998, ANNU REP MED CHEM, V33, P301