A fluorescence polarization based screening assay for identification of small molecule inhibitors of the PICK1 PDZ domain

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

A fluorescence polarization based screening assay for identification of small molecule inhibitors of the PICK1 PDZ domain. / Thorsen, Thor S; Madsen, Kenneth L; Dyhring, Tino; Bach, Anders; Peters, Dan; Strømgaard, Kristian; Rønn, Lars Christian B; Gether, Ulrik.

In: Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening, Vol. 14, No. 7, 01.08.2011, p. 590-600.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Thorsen, TS, Madsen, KL, Dyhring, T, Bach, A, Peters, D, Strømgaard, K, Rønn, LCB & Gether, U 2011, 'A fluorescence polarization based screening assay for identification of small molecule inhibitors of the PICK1 PDZ domain', Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening, vol. 14, no. 7, pp. 590-600.

APA

Thorsen, T. S., Madsen, K. L., Dyhring, T., Bach, A., Peters, D., Strømgaard, K., Rønn, L. C. B., & Gether, U. (2011). A fluorescence polarization based screening assay for identification of small molecule inhibitors of the PICK1 PDZ domain. Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening, 14(7), 590-600.

Vancouver

Thorsen TS, Madsen KL, Dyhring T, Bach A, Peters D, Strømgaard K et al. A fluorescence polarization based screening assay for identification of small molecule inhibitors of the PICK1 PDZ domain. Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening. 2011 Aug 1;14(7):590-600.

Author

Thorsen, Thor S ; Madsen, Kenneth L ; Dyhring, Tino ; Bach, Anders ; Peters, Dan ; Strømgaard, Kristian ; Rønn, Lars Christian B ; Gether, Ulrik. / A fluorescence polarization based screening assay for identification of small molecule inhibitors of the PICK1 PDZ domain. In: Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening. 2011 ; Vol. 14, No. 7. pp. 590-600.

Bibtex

@article{48c7e0e3e5184be4913010a38245fca6,
title = "A fluorescence polarization based screening assay for identification of small molecule inhibitors of the PICK1 PDZ domain",
abstract = "PDZ (PSD-95/Discs-large/ZO-1 homology) domains represent putative targets in several diseases including cancer, stroke, addiction and neuropathic pain. Here we describe the application of a simple and fast screening assay based on fluorescence polarization (FP) to identify inhibitors of the PDZ domain in PICK1 (protein interacting with C kinase 1). We screened 43,380 compounds for their ability to inhibit binding of an Oregon Green labeled C-terminal dopamine transporter peptide (OrG-DAT C13) to purified PICK1 in solution. The assay was highly reliable with excellent screening assay parameters (Z'˜0.7 and Z˜0.6). Out of ~200 compounds that reduced FP to less than 80% of the control wells, six compounds were further characterized. The apparent affinities of the compounds were determined in FP competition binding experiments and ranged from ~5.0 µM to ~193 µM. Binding to the PICK1 PDZ domain was confirmed for five of the compounds (CSC-03, CSC-04, CSC-43, FSC-231 and FSC-240) in a non-fluorescence based assay by their ability to inhibit pull-down of PICK1 by a C-terminal DAT GST fusion protein. CSC-03 displayed the highest apparent affinity (5.0 µM) in the FP assay, and was according to fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments capable of inhibiting the interaction between the C-terminus of the GluR2 subunit of the AMPA-type glutamate receptor and PICK1 in live cells. Additional experiments suggested that CSC-03 most likely is an irreversible inhibitor but with specificity for PICK1 since it did not bind three different PDZ domains of PSD-95. Summarized, our data suggest that FP based screening assays might be a widely applicable tool in the search for small molecule inhibitors of PDZ domain interactions.",
author = "Thorsen, {Thor S} and Madsen, {Kenneth L} and Tino Dyhring and Anders Bach and Dan Peters and Kristian Str{\o}mgaard and R{\o}nn, {Lars Christian B} and Ulrik Gether",
year = "2011",
month = aug,
day = "1",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
pages = "590--600",
journal = "Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening",
issn = "1386-2073",
publisher = "Bentham Science Publishers",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A fluorescence polarization based screening assay for identification of small molecule inhibitors of the PICK1 PDZ domain

AU - Thorsen, Thor S

AU - Madsen, Kenneth L

AU - Dyhring, Tino

AU - Bach, Anders

AU - Peters, Dan

AU - Strømgaard, Kristian

AU - Rønn, Lars Christian B

AU - Gether, Ulrik

PY - 2011/8/1

Y1 - 2011/8/1

N2 - PDZ (PSD-95/Discs-large/ZO-1 homology) domains represent putative targets in several diseases including cancer, stroke, addiction and neuropathic pain. Here we describe the application of a simple and fast screening assay based on fluorescence polarization (FP) to identify inhibitors of the PDZ domain in PICK1 (protein interacting with C kinase 1). We screened 43,380 compounds for their ability to inhibit binding of an Oregon Green labeled C-terminal dopamine transporter peptide (OrG-DAT C13) to purified PICK1 in solution. The assay was highly reliable with excellent screening assay parameters (Z'˜0.7 and Z˜0.6). Out of ~200 compounds that reduced FP to less than 80% of the control wells, six compounds were further characterized. The apparent affinities of the compounds were determined in FP competition binding experiments and ranged from ~5.0 µM to ~193 µM. Binding to the PICK1 PDZ domain was confirmed for five of the compounds (CSC-03, CSC-04, CSC-43, FSC-231 and FSC-240) in a non-fluorescence based assay by their ability to inhibit pull-down of PICK1 by a C-terminal DAT GST fusion protein. CSC-03 displayed the highest apparent affinity (5.0 µM) in the FP assay, and was according to fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments capable of inhibiting the interaction between the C-terminus of the GluR2 subunit of the AMPA-type glutamate receptor and PICK1 in live cells. Additional experiments suggested that CSC-03 most likely is an irreversible inhibitor but with specificity for PICK1 since it did not bind three different PDZ domains of PSD-95. Summarized, our data suggest that FP based screening assays might be a widely applicable tool in the search for small molecule inhibitors of PDZ domain interactions.

AB - PDZ (PSD-95/Discs-large/ZO-1 homology) domains represent putative targets in several diseases including cancer, stroke, addiction and neuropathic pain. Here we describe the application of a simple and fast screening assay based on fluorescence polarization (FP) to identify inhibitors of the PDZ domain in PICK1 (protein interacting with C kinase 1). We screened 43,380 compounds for their ability to inhibit binding of an Oregon Green labeled C-terminal dopamine transporter peptide (OrG-DAT C13) to purified PICK1 in solution. The assay was highly reliable with excellent screening assay parameters (Z'˜0.7 and Z˜0.6). Out of ~200 compounds that reduced FP to less than 80% of the control wells, six compounds were further characterized. The apparent affinities of the compounds were determined in FP competition binding experiments and ranged from ~5.0 µM to ~193 µM. Binding to the PICK1 PDZ domain was confirmed for five of the compounds (CSC-03, CSC-04, CSC-43, FSC-231 and FSC-240) in a non-fluorescence based assay by their ability to inhibit pull-down of PICK1 by a C-terminal DAT GST fusion protein. CSC-03 displayed the highest apparent affinity (5.0 µM) in the FP assay, and was according to fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments capable of inhibiting the interaction between the C-terminus of the GluR2 subunit of the AMPA-type glutamate receptor and PICK1 in live cells. Additional experiments suggested that CSC-03 most likely is an irreversible inhibitor but with specificity for PICK1 since it did not bind three different PDZ domains of PSD-95. Summarized, our data suggest that FP based screening assays might be a widely applicable tool in the search for small molecule inhibitors of PDZ domain interactions.

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 21534917

VL - 14

SP - 590

EP - 600

JO - Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening

JF - Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening

SN - 1386-2073

IS - 7

ER -

ID: 34252886