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Green Fluorescent Protein Reporter Microplate Assay for High-Throughput Screening of Compounds against Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Author(s) -
L A Collins,
Mari. Torrero,
Scott G. Franzblau
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
antimicrobial agents and chemotherapy
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.07
H-Index - 259
eISSN - 1070-6283
pISSN - 0066-4804
DOI - 10.1128/aac.42.2.344
Subject(s) - ethionamide , green fluorescent protein , mycobacterium tuberculosis , isoniazid , antimycobacterial , luciferase , ethambutol , reporter gene , biology , microbiology and biotechnology , plate reader , high throughput screening , tuberculosis , streptomycin , chemistry , virology , transfection , biochemistry , fluorescence , medicine , antibiotics , gene , gene expression , physics , pathology , quantum mechanics
An optimal assay for high-throughput screening for new antituberculosis agents would combine the microplate format and low cost of firefly luciferase reporter assays and redox dyes with the ease of kinetic monitoring inherent in the BACTEC system. The green fluorescent protein (GFP) of the jellyfishAequorea victoria is a useful reporter molecule which requires neither substrates nor cofactors due to the intrinsically fluorescent nature of the protein. The gene encoding a red-shifted, higher-intensity GFP variant was introduced by electroporation intoMycobacterium tuberculosis H37 Ra andM. tuberculosis H37 Rv on expression vector pFPV2. A microplate-based fluorescence assay (GFP microplate assay [GFPMA]) was developed and evaluated by determining the MICs of existing antimycobacterial agents. The MICs of isoniazid, rifampin, ethambutol, streptomycin, amikacin, ofloxacin, ethionamide, thiacetazone, and capreomycin, but not cycloserine, determined by GFPMA were within 1 log2 dilution of those determined with the BACTEC 460 system and were available in 7 days. Equivalent MICs of antituberculosis agents in the BACTEC 460 system for both the reporter and parent strains suggested that introduction of pFPV2 did not influence drug susceptibility, in general. GFPMA provides a unique tool with which the dynamic response ofM. tuberculosis to the existing and potential antituberculosis agents can easily, rapidly, and inexpensively be monitored.

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