A Fluorescent Ligand-Binding Alternative Using Tag-lite® Technology

G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are crucial cell surface receptors that transmit signals from a wide range of extracellular ligands. Indeed, 40% to 50% of all marketed drugs are thought to modulate GPCR activity, making them the major class of targets in the drug discovery process. Binding assay...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of biomolecular screening 2010-12, Vol.15 (10), p.1248-1259
Hauptverfasser: Zwier, Jurriaan M., Roux, Thomas, Cottet, Martin, Durroux, Thierry, Douzon, Stephanie, Bdioui, Sara, Gregor, Nathalie, Bourrier, Emmanuel, Oueslati, Nadia, Nicolas, Ludovic, Tinel, Norbert, Boisseau, Chloe, Yverneau, Paul, Charrier-Savournin, Fabienne, Fink, Michel, Trinquet, Eric
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are crucial cell surface receptors that transmit signals from a wide range of extracellular ligands. Indeed, 40% to 50% of all marketed drugs are thought to modulate GPCR activity, making them the major class of targets in the drug discovery process. Binding assays are widely used to identify high-affinity, selective, and potent GPCR drugs. In this field, the use of radiolabeled ligands has remained so far the gold-standard method. Here the authors report a less hazardous alternative for high-throughput screening (HTS) applications by the setup of a nonradioactive fluorescence-based technology named Tag-lite®. Selective binding of various fluorescent ligands, either peptidic or not, covering a large panel of GPCRs from different classes is illustrated, particularly for chemokine (CXCR4), opioid (δ, µ, and κ), and cholecystokinin (CCK1 and CCK2) receptors. Affinity constants of well-known pharmacological agents of numerous GPCRs are in line with values published in the literature. The authors clearly demonstrate that the Tag-lite binding assay format can be successfully and reproducibly applied by using different cellular materials such as transient or stable recombinant cells lines expressing SNAP-tagged GPCR. Such fluorescent-based binding assays can be performed with adherent cells or cells in suspension, in 96- or 384-well plates. Altogether, this new technology offers great advantages in terms of flexibility, rapidity, and user-friendliness; allows easy miniaturization; and makes it completely suitable for HTS applications.
ISSN:2472-5552
1087-0571
2472-5560
1552-454X
DOI:10.1177/1087057110384611