Detecting Secretory Proteins by Acoustic Droplet Ejection in Multiplexed High-Throughput Applications
Author(s) -
Michael J. Iannotti,
Ryan MacArthur,
Richard Jones,
Dingyin Tao,
Ilyas Singeç,
Sam Michael,
James Inglese
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs chemical biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.899
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1554-8937
pISSN - 1554-8929
DOI - 10.1021/acschembio.9b00001
Subject(s) - protein microarray , multiplex , proteome , secretion , high throughput screening , drug discovery , microbiology and biotechnology , secretory protein , proteomics , biology , extracellular , induced pluripotent stem cell , computational biology , chemistry , biochemistry , bioinformatics , microarray , gene expression , gene , embryonic stem cell
Nearly one-third of the encoded proteome is comprised of secretory proteins that enable communication between cells and organ systems, playing a ubiquitous role in human health and disease. High-throughput detection of secreted proteins would enhance efforts to identify therapies for secretion-related diseases. Using the Z mutant of alpha-1 antitrypsin as a human secretory model, we have developed 1536-well high-throughput screening assays that utilize acoustic droplet ejection to transfer nanoliter volumes of sample for protein quantification. Among them, the acoustic reverse phase protein array (acoustic RPPA) is a multiplexable, low-cost immunodetection technology for native, endogenously secreted proteins from physiologically relevant model systems like stem cells that is compatible with plate-based instrumentation. Parallel assay profiling with the LOPAC 1280 chemical library validated performance and orthogonality between a secreted bioluminescent reporter and acoustic RPPA method by consistently identifying secretory modulators with comparable concentration response relationships. Here, we introduce a robust, multiplexed drug discovery platform coupling extracellular protein quantification by acoustic RPPA with intracellular and cytotoxicity analyses from single wells, demonstrating proof-of-principle applications for human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived hepatocytes.
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