- In the previous article of this two-article set, we
presented the current status of the high-throughput screening
(HTS) industry in terms of the qualitative trends and drivers
and the quantitative metrics that characterize current
screening operations. We focused in that article primarily on
the size of screens, the numbers of data points on average
that are generated, as well as the library sizes that are
screened. Much of the information was derived from the
ScreenTech World Summit 2003 held in March 2003 in San Diego,
CA.
- In this, the second article from the ScreenTech
conference, we focus upon the technology trends in this space
as they relate to the different drug target classes of
relevance in drug discovery, and how these emerging
technologies are expected to impact HTS going forward.
Introduction and Overview of Emerging Technologies in HTS
from the ScreenTech Conference
The 2003 ScreenTech World Summit was a multitrack conference,
whereby different topics and drug target classes of value in HTS
were presented in parallel. It is becoming clear that the
hitherto amorphous HTS industry is now becoming gelled, in that
certain technologies and approaches have established themselves
as the workhorse of the industry, and there are emerging
technologies and trends on the horizon. In this section of the
article, we address some of the preeminent emerging technologies
in the space and discuss each in terms of its value in the HTS
arena.
Emerging Technology in Multiplexing of Cell-Based Assays
for HTS: Using Nonpositional Arrays
A number of companies presented technologies in this area.
Virtual Arrays (Sunnyvale, CA, USA) presented their digital bar
code-based technology for addressing targets in cells In Vivo,
in multiple cellular populations simultaneously. This
multi-parametric, multi-cell analysis is a powerful enabling
tool for the analysis of drug targets as well as toxicity
markers in single wells. The presentation by Virtual Arrays at
the conference demonstrated how G protein-coupled receptors as
well as absorption, distribution, metabolism, excretion (ADME)/toxicity
markers could be simultaneously analyzed in a cell-based format.
A schematic of the digital bar codes from Virtual Arrays is
presented in Figure 3 (note that each of these bar codes--nanocarriers
can accommodate one cell type, and the technology currently
enables 10-50 different cell types to be interrogated
simultaneously).
Detection System for HTS that Involves Enzymatic
Amplification of the Readout Signal
DiscoveRx Corporation (Fremont, CA, USA) presented its
technology platform for cell-based assays utilizing the
complementation of enzyme fragments from ß-galactosidase as a
readout system. This technology is in line with the current
theme in cell-based assays whereby key receptors (on the cell
surface) as well as intracellular molecules of value in signal
transduction are labeled using a biological tag. In the case of
the DiscoveRx technology, the tag is a fragment of the ß-galactosidase
enzyme that "tracks" the biological pathway under interrogation.
The use of an enzymatic tag enables a very sensitive readout of
the biology in question (such as G protein-coupled receptor [GPCR]
signaling, for instance). This is because very small signals
(emanating from the biological event in question) are amplified
as the reconstituted enzyme, ß-galactosidase, and turn over
substrate into product--hence, this technology is a biological
signal amplification system for intracellular events. Figure 4
schematically presents the DiscoveRx technology platform and how
the ß-galactosidase system is an amplifiable marker for cell
signaling In Vivo.
Labeling Signaling Pathways with Reporters In Vivo
for Screening
An interesting technology for cell-based assays of important
pharmaceutical targets was presented at the conference by
Bionaut Pharmaceuticals (Cambridge, MA, USA). Bionaut is
championing a technology whereby reporter genes are introduced
into targeted genetic sites (within key genes in cells In
Vivo). In this manner, the company creates what they term as
Sentinel Lines(TM), which enable dissection of signaling
pathways In Vivo. In other words, a reporter gene can be
delivered into every genetic site regulated by insulin. Each
cell clone isolated using this approach can then be used to
monitor activity of insulin or screen for new drug
candidates--whether they stimulate or inhibit targeted insulin
pathway(s). In a sense, this is a molecular version of the
traditional pharmaceutical approach--create a disease model and
then screen drugs against it to see what works. The isolation
and use of multiple cell lines, each embodying a unique reporter
gene, allows early and rapid screening for pathway redundancy,
specificity, and adverse side effects--issues responsible for
the substantial portion of drug failures during downstream
clinical trials. It will be interesting to note how well the
pharmaceutical industry embraces the Bionaut approach to
cellular pathway interrogation.
Multiplexed Assays using Positional Arrays in Microtiter
Plate Format
A very interesting technology for multiplexing was presented by
Meso Scale Discovery (MSD; Gaithersburg, MD, USA). This company
is focused on the use of electrochemiluminescence detection
readout coupled with the use of arrays in the bottom of
traditional SBS-footprint microtiter plates to enable HTS across
a number of assay methodologies (in either biochemical or
cell-based format), such as:
- Immunoassays.
- Receptor ligand interactions.
- Transcriptional assays.
- Protein translation assays.
- Protein nucleic acid analysis.
The technology from MSD utilizes traditional microtiter
plates (96-, 384-, or 1536-well footprint) that work in
combination with custom plate bottoms, which essentially is a
sheet with integrated electrodes. In this manner, each well in a
plate has multiple "addressable" sites on its bottom. The
detection system is an imaging-based system that reads
chemiluminescence emitted by the plate upon stimulation by the
electrodes (below the plate). MSD has built a high-throughput
instrument that accommodates the plate(s) and the electrode
plate beneath it. In addition, it has a charge-coupled device (CCD)-based
imager with a telecentric lens that enables the plate to be
imaged en bloc. The MSD system for screening enables a wide
range of applications (i.e., complex assays for HTS) to be run
on it, such as:
- Kinase assays.
- Ubiquitination assays.
- Receptor ligand-binding assays.
- GPCR assays (binding-based and functional).
- Multiplexed assays (for cytokines and for
autophosphorylation).
- Immunoassays in cell lysates.
- Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) replacements
(antibody selection).
- Integrins.
- DNA-protein-binding assays.
Similar to the Virtual Arrays technology platform, the MSD
technology enables, e.g., multiplexed analysis of GPCR drug
targets. In summary, MSD made a very strong showing at the
ScreenTech conference where they presented their technology
platform, which included the following:
- Instrumentation that is screening-ready, is in nonwashing
format, delivers sensitivity, and dynamic range.
- Plate-based assays.
- Multispot microplates (for multiplexing).
- Compatible with existing automation for screening.
- Reagents allow rapid assay development.
- Complex biological assays can be run deploying this
technology.
- Membrane-based assays for GPCRs, epidermal growth factor
receptor (EGFR), vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR),
and whole cell assays.
- Kinases.
- Ubiquitinylation.
- Multiplexed assays.
- Integrin assays.
- DNA-protein-binding assays.
Amgen (Thousand Oaks, CA, USA) at the ScreenTech conference
presented a technology assessment of the MSD technology
platform. The conclusions from the study were that the MSD
technology platform enables the building of assays quickly, the
identification of hits, potency and selectivity assignment to
these hits, and determination of cellular efficacy. In brief,
the ability of the MSD technology to perform the widely accepted
biologies in the HTS space coupled with the ability to multiplex
assays using conventional instrumentation makes MSD a powerful
entrant in the HTS space.
Addressing Protein Kinase Targets in HTS
The emerging technologies presented earlier in this article are
applicable to a number of different target classes in drug
discovery. For instance, the Virtual Arrays technology can be
applied to a number of different target classes, although it
appears to work well with cell-associated targets, such as GPCRs.
Some target classes, such as the protein kinases, can be
screened effectively in both biochemical and cell-based systems,
and the need in such a case is to be able to develop multikinase
assays that can address a large number of kinase targets In
Vivo.
Protein kinases are an important target class for drug
discovery, since protein phosphorylation is a central element in
cell signaling. Thirty percent of all proteins contain
covalently bound phosphate, 518 protein kinases and about 100
protein phosphatases are encoded in the human genome (assuming a
relatively conservative number of 100,000 proteins, each kinase
phosphorylates more than 200 proteins In Vivo). Also, it
is known that mutation or misregulation of protein kinases is
the consequence of many disease states, hence it is of value for
the pharmaceutical industry to be able to screen protein kinases
efficiently in a high-throughput manner.
Many cancers demonstrate up-regulated protein tyrosine kinase
activity, as presented in the Table 2. The purpose of Table 2 is
to demonstrate how key kinases are in human cancer and thereby
offer an economic opportunity to the pharmaceutical industry for
drug discovery and development, against this target class.
Upstate (Charlottesville, VA, USA) presented at the
conference their technology and scope of assays that enable
various human kinases to be interrogated. Upstate presented its
lead profiling business, KinaseProfiler(TM), which is composed
of enzymes that have therapeutic relevance, address the
diversity of kinases, and cover subfamilies of kinases. The
panel of kinase assays comprises about 70 different assays
covering a large amount of the known kinase real estate In
Vivo. Using this approach, general kinase inhibitors can be
quickly identified and further characterized. Subsequent to this
initial identification, a selectivity profile can be performed
to identify selective kinase inhibitors (e.g., those of the Src
family of nonreceptor tyrosine kinases). Selectivity profiling
enhances kinase drug development as it quickly defines potential
toxicology issues, which can have a triage role in the drug
discovery process.
Survey of the Landscape of Emerging Fluorescence-Based
Assay Technologies in HTS
A number of vendors at the ScreenTech conference presented new
fluorescence-based technologies and gave presentations together
with the pharmaceutical and biotech end-users. Jeff Stack of
Vertex Pharmaceuticals (Cambridge, MA, USA) delivered an
excellent presentation that focused on some of the key
state-of-the-art technologies in HTS that Vertex is deploying in
its drug discovery efforts.
The Vertex San Diego screening facility is based upon the
Aurora Biosciences acquisition, and this facility has
miniaturized screening to the 3456-well format (the well-known
Aurora Nanoplate format). In addition, the Aurora facility has a
dedicated HTS line for ion channel targets and a fully automated
compound handling system for rapid turnaround of hit picks and
dose-response titrations.
Vertex possesses some of the most current fluorescence-based
assay technology portfolio for screening, such as:
- GPCR screening using ß-lactamase reporter gene system.
- Cytokine receptor screening using ß-lactamase reporter
gene system.
- Nuclear receptor screening using ß-lactamase reporter gene
system.
- Ion channel screening using voltage-sensitive fluorescent
probes.
- Cytochrome P450 assays.
- Protease target assays using green fluorescent protein (GFP),
fluorescence-resonance energy transfer (FRET) peptides, and ß-lactamase
reporter gene system.
- Kinase and phosphatases target screening using FRET
peptides and cell-based assays.
- Protein translocation (redistribution) assays In Vivo,
using GFP.
The above technology portfolio covers the majority of the
emerging assay biologies in widespread use across the
pharmaceutical screening landscape. Indeed, the use of ß-lactamase
reporter gene systems is widespread as a fluorescence-based
system for functional assays of target classes, such as GPCRs
and nuclear hormone receptors (NHRs). GFP is a very
well-established detection system for the readout of biological
translocation events In Vivo and more recently has begun
to be utilized as a protein sensor In Vivo. Spectrally
distinct GFPs are available from a number of vendors that can be
used to put together FRET assays for biologically relevant
events In Vivo. In addition, this portfolio of
technologies includes fluorescent probes that are FRET-based
with voltage-sensing properties, and therefore are of value in
ion channel high-throughput screening.
The ß-Lactamase Reporter Gene System for Functional
Screening: A Technology Platform for Addressing the Key
Pharmaceutical Targets in a Physiologically Relevant Context
Much of the technology presentations at the ScreenTech
conference were focused upon functional assays for HTS, given
that receptor-ligand interactions and their perturbation per se
by small molecules do not convey enough biological information
for effective screening. The emerging technologies for screening
all seek to functionally interrogate (drug) targets using
intracellular readouts. These technologies all necessitate the
use of intracellular sensors of biological functionality, such
as GFP and ß-lactamase, among others.
The ß-lactamase enzyme has a specific activity In Vivo.
It converts a substrate that is fluorescent to a different
colored product that can be measured using fluorescent
microscopes, flow cytometric cell sorters, or simply
fluorescence-reading plate readers.
The value of the ß-lactamase system is that it can be used as
a biological readout for the activation of a signal transduction
pathway In Vivo, which is stimulated upon activation of
cell surface receptors, such as GPCRs. The signal transduction
pathway activated by the receptor (interacting functionally with
its ligand), triggers the production of ß-lactamase enzyme In
Vivo that then cleaves the substrate, which is a
cell-permeable fluorescent molecule, into a product that can be
spectrally distinguished from the substrate.
The power of this technology stems from the fact that cell
lines can be developed containing the reporter system (the ß-lactamase
gene under the control of the appropriate regulatory elements)
and these can be selected using flow cytometry. These
"hard-wired" cell lines can then be used for a variety of assays
addressing target classes such as GPCRs, proteases, kinases, and
nuclear receptors. Note that since the fluorogenic substrates
are cell-permeable, there is no need for cell lysis, and intact
cells can be analyzed in situ. In addition, the homogeneous
nature of this assay lends itself well to automation.
Another powerful feature of this reporter system is that
since the fluorescent measurements are ratiometric, this
internally controls for experiment-to-experiment variations in
reagents, cell numbers, and other environmental conditions.
In summary, the reporter gene-based systems have value as a
screening technology platform since they provide a functional
readout for the target class that they interrogate. Perhaps, a
concern in utilizing the technology is how tightly the
activation of the target (under interrogation in the screen) is
with the triggering of the reporter gene function.
Imaging in HTS
A technological move in the HTS landscape is the shift towards
imaging and live-cell (intact) assays in screening. This is, in
part, driven by the need to develop and deploy screening
technologies that can quickly triage the nondruggable from the
druggable targets. The technologies and instruments presented at
ScreenTech were focused on live cell assays and approaches for
high-content screening.
In this vein, companies such as Atto Bioscience (Rockville,
MD, USA) presented their live cell-imaging platform that enables
intact cell-based assays to be performed. Also, Amersham
Biosciences (Piscataway, NJ, USA) presented their IN Cell
Analyzer instrument platform, which enable high-throughput
high-content screening in a cell-based format. Therefore, assays
for translocation of nuclear factor kappa B (NFkB)
from the cytoplasm to the nucleus can be run on such an
instrument, and assays for the translocation of moieties from
the cytoplasm to the cell membrane (or vice versa) can be
performed. The instrumentation in essence is a high-resolution
fluorescent microscope that is microplate compatible (96- and
384-well format) that images the wells and uses powerful image
analysis to interrogate the data so generated. Using such an
instrumentation platform, and the intellectual property rights
around GFP, Amersham Biosciences is building a portfolio of
assays for some of the key signal transduction molecules In
Vivo and following up with commercial products, such as
stable cell lines, vectors, as well as validated assays. This
menu of products for HTS is the direction in which this
marketplace is heading.
Technology Trends in the Screening Space Going Forward
This article together with its companion (the previous article
in this two-part set) addresses the technology trends together
with the quantitative metrics of the HTS space.
The following list presents our assessment of technology
trends in screening going forward:
- Increasing emphasis placed on the assay biologies for
screening (both primary and secondary).
- Decreasing emphasis on detection methodologies and
readouts--standardization around particular detection
platforms as well as instrumentation.
- Increasing utilization of intact cell-based assay
technologies across the screening landscape for the analysis
of key signaling molecules In Vivo, such as the
interrogation of NFkB, inhibitor
kappa B (IkB), Janus kinases (JAKs),
signal transducers and activators of transcription (Stats),
and other signal transduction intermediates.
- Decreasing emphasis on purely receptor-ligand binding
assays and an increasing emphasis on functional assays that
give a readout based on the triggering of the biological event
(such as receptor activation with ligand).
- Increasing emphasis on technologies where the target
screening is coupled to a toxicity screen, such that toxic
compounds can be quickly triaged out of the screening process.
- Increasing emphasis on multiplexed assays, whereby either
multiple different cell lines or different targets are all
interrogated in a given well of a microtiter plate, thereby
reducing the cost of precious reagents and increasing the
speed of the screening ensemble.
- Increasing the emphasis on technologies that can transcend
individual target classes, which can be utilized for screening
across lots of different target classes.