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Fully Synthetic Phage-Like System for Screening Mixtures of Small Molecules in Live Cells.

Authors :
Gerardo Byk
Shirly Partouche
Aryeh Weiss
Shlomo Margel
Raz Khandadash
Source :
Journal of Combinatorial Chemistry. May2010, Vol. 12 Issue 3, p332-345. 14p.
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

A synthetic “phage-like” system was designed for screening mixtures of small molecules in live cells. The core of the system consists of 2 μm diameter cross-linked monodispersed microspheres bearing a panel of fluorescent tags and peptides or small molecules either directly synthesized or covalently conjugated to the microspheres. The microsphere mixtures were screened for affinity to cell line PC-3 (prostate cancer model) by incubation with live cells, and as was with phage-display peptide methods, unbound microspheres were removed by repeated washings followed by total lysis of cells and analysis of the bound microspheres by flow-cytometry. Similar to phage-display peptide screening, this method can be applied even in the absence of prior information about the cellular targets of the candidate ligands, which makes the system especially interesting for selection of molecules with high affinity for desired cells, tissues, or tumors. The advantage of the proposed system is the possibility of screening synthetic non-natural peptides or small molecules that cannot be expressed and screened using phage display libraries. A library composed of small molecules synthesized by the Ugi reaction was screened, and a small molecule, Rak-2, which strongly binds to PC-3 cells was found. Rak-2 was then individually synthesized and validated in a complementary whole cell-based binding assay, as well as by live cell microscopy. This new system demonstrates that a mixture of molecules bound to subcellular sized microspheres can be screened on plated cells. Together with other methods using subcellular sized particles for cellular multiplexing, this method represents an important milestone toward high throughput screening of mixtures of small molecules in live cells and in vivo with potential applications in the fields of drug delivery and diagnostic imaging. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15204766
Volume :
12
Issue :
3
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Combinatorial Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
50601194
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/cc900156z