Screening Pools of Compounds against Multiple Endogenously Expressed Targets in a Chemoproteomics Binding Assay
Author(s) -
Elsa Salzer,
Elizabeth Nixon,
Gerard Drewes,
Friedrich Reinhard,
Giovanna Bergamini,
Christina Rau
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
slas technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.714
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 2472-6311
pISSN - 2472-6303
DOI - 10.1177/2211068215595355
Subject(s) - pooling , barcode , high throughput screening , throughput , computational biology , automation , computer science , biology , chemistry , biochemistry , engineering , artificial intelligence , telecommunications , wireless , operating system , mechanical engineering
Chemoproteomics-based competition-binding assays allow the screening of compounds against endogenous proteins in cell or tissue extracts, but these assays are hampered by low throughput and high cost. Using compound pools rather than single compounds in a screening campaign holds the promise of increased efficiency and substantial cost reduction. Previous attempts to screen compounds in pools often fell short due to complex data tracking, deconvolution issues, compound interferences, and automation problems. The desire to screen compounds in a high-throughput chemoproteomics format sparked a reassessment of compound pooling. Through the integration of acoustic dispensing, we enabled a flexible pooling process, allowing mixture creation by combining randomized or specific samples to create defined pools. Automation enabled end-to-end tracking, using barcode scan check points and output files to track data and ensure integrity during the mixture creation process. The compound pooling approach proved to be highly compatible with the chemoproteomics assay technology. Pools of 10 compounds in a single well did not show compound interference effects or increased false-positive/negative rates. In the present study, four targets, TBK1, PI3Kδ, PI3Kγ, and mTOR, were screened using a chemoproteomics approach against pools of 10 compounds per well, resulting in robust hit identification.
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