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High-Throughput Screening of Myometrial Calcium-Mobilization to Identify Modulators of Uterine Contractility
Author(s) -
Jennifer L. Herington,
Daniel R. Swale,
Naoko Brown,
Elaine L. Shelton,
Hyehun Choi,
Charles H. Williams,
Charles C. Hong,
Bibhash C. Paria,
Jerod S. Denton,
Jeff Reese
Publication year - 2015
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0143243
Subject(s) - myometrium , uterine contraction , contractility , pharmacology , oxytocin , agonist , chemistry , antagonist , medicine , endocrinology , receptor , uterus
The uterine myometrium (UT-myo) is a therapeutic target for preterm labor, labor induction, and postpartum hemorrhage. Stimulation of intracellular Ca 2+ -release in UT-myo cells by oxytocin is a final pathway controlling myometrial contractions. The goal of this study was to develop a dual-addition assay for high-throughput screening of small molecular compounds, which could regulate Ca 2+ -mobilization in UT-myo cells, and hence, myometrial contractions. Primary murine UT-myo cells in 384-well plates were loaded with a Ca 2+ -sensitive fluorescent probe, and then screened for inducers of Ca 2+ -mobilization and inhibitors of oxytocin-induced Ca 2+ -mobilization. The assay exhibited robust screening statistics (Z´ = 0.73), DMSO-tolerance, and was validated for high-throughput screening against 2,727 small molecules from the Spectrum, NIH Clinical I and II collections of well-annotated compounds. The screen revealed a hit-rate of 1.80% for agonist and 1.39% for antagonist compounds. Concentration-dependent responses of hit-compounds demonstrated an EC 50 less than 10μM for 21 hit-antagonist compounds, compared to only 7 hit-agonist compounds. Subsequent studies focused on hit-antagonist compounds. Based on the percent inhibition and functional annotation analyses, we selected 4 confirmed hit-antagonist compounds (benzbromarone, dipyridamole, fenoterol hydrobromide and nisoldipine) for further analysis. Using an ex vivo isometric contractility assay, each compound significantly inhibited uterine contractility, at different potencies (IC 50 ). Overall, these results demonstrate for the first time that high-throughput small-molecules screening of myometrial Ca 2+ -mobilization is an ideal primary approach for discovering modulators of uterine contractility.

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