Channelpedia

PubMed 19773585


Referenced in: none

Automatically associated channels: HCN1



Title: A novel high-throughput screening assay for HCN channel blocker using membrane potential-sensitive dye and FLIPR.

Authors: Dmitry V Vasilyev, Qin J Shan, Yan T Lee, Veronica Soloveva, Stanley P Nawoschik, Edward J Kaftan, John Dunlop, Scott C Mayer, Mark R Bowlby

Journal, date & volume: J Biomol Screen, 2009 Oct , 14, 1119-28

PubMed link: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19773585


Abstract
Hyperpolarization-activated cation nonselective (HCN) channels represent an interesting group of targets for drug development. In this study, the authors report the development of a novel membrane potential-sensitive dye (MPSD) assay for HCN channel modulators that has been miniaturized into 384-well fluorescent imaging plate reader (FLIPR) high-throughput screening (HTS) format. When optimized (by cell plating density, plate type, cell recovery from cryopreservation), the well-to-well signal variability was low, with a Z' = 0.73 and coefficient of variation = 6.4%, whereas the MPSD fluorescence signal amplitude was -23,700 +/- 1500 FLIPR(3) relative fluorescence units (a linear relationship was found between HCN1 MPSD fluorescence signal and the cell plating density) and was completely blocked by 30 microM ZD7288. The assay tolerated up to 1% DMSO, inclusion of which did not significantly change the signal kinetics or amplitude. A single-concentration screening of an ion channel-focused library composed of 4855 compounds resulted in 89 HCN1 blocker hits, 51 of which were subsequently analyzed with an 8-point concentration-response analysis on the IonWorks HT electrophysiology platform. The correlation between MPSD and the electrophysiology assay was moderate, as shown by the linear regression analysis (r(2) = 0.56) between the respective IC(50)s obtained using these 2 assays. The reported HTS-compatible HCN channel blocker assay can serve as a tool in drug discovery in the pursuit of HCN channel isoform-selective small molecules that could be used in the development of clinically relevant compounds.