Login / Signup

High-Throughput Dual Screening Method for Ras Activities and Inhibitors.

Kari KopraArjan J van AdrichemOuti M H Salo-AhenJuha PeltonenKrister WennerbergHarri Härmä
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2017)
Ras GTPases act as "molecular switches", alternating between inactive GDP-bound and active GTP-bound conformation. Ras-oncogenes were discovered over three decades ago, but there are still no effective therapies for Ras-driven cancers. So far, drug discovery strategies have been unsuccessful, because of a lack of suitable screening methodologies and well-defined binding pockets on the Ras proteins. Here, we addressed the former by introducing a homogeneous quenching resonance energy transfer (QRET) technique-based screening strategy for Ras interfacial and competitive inhibitors. We demonstrate that using a unique GTP-specific antibody fragment to monitor GTPase cycling in the presence of a guanine nucleotide exchange factor (GEF) and a GTPase activating protein (GAP) is an efficient method for Ras inhibitor high-throughput screening. When compared to a conventional GEF-stimulated nucleotide exchange assay in a proof-of-concept screen, we identified an overlapping set of potential inhibitor compounds but also compounds found exclusively with the new GTP hydrolysis monitoring-based GTPase cycling assay.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • high throughput
  • energy transfer
  • drug discovery
  • young adults
  • binding protein
  • risk assessment
  • crystal structure
  • childhood cancer