Department of Pediatrics, Cell Biology and Physiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC and Magee-Womens Hospital Research Institute, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2010 Nov 12;5(11):e15460. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0015460.
The development of preclinical models amenable to live animal bioactive compound screening is an attractive approach to discovering effective pharmacological therapies for disorders caused by misfolded and aggregation-prone proteins. In general, however, live animal drug screening is labor and resource intensive, and has been hampered by the lack of robust assay designs and high throughput work-flows. Based on their small size, tissue transparency and ease of cultivation, the use of C. elegans should obviate many of the technical impediments associated with live animal drug screening. Moreover, their genetic tractability and accomplished record for providing insights into the molecular and cellular basis of human disease, should make C. elegans an ideal model system for in vivo drug discovery campaigns. The goal of this study was to determine whether C. elegans could be adapted to high-throughput and high-content drug screening strategies analogous to those developed for cell-based systems. Using transgenic animals expressing fluorescently-tagged proteins, we first developed a high-quality, high-throughput work-flow utilizing an automated fluorescence microscopy platform with integrated image acquisition and data analysis modules to qualitatively assess different biological processes including, growth, tissue development, cell viability and autophagy. We next adapted this technology to conduct a small molecule screen and identified compounds that altered the intracellular accumulation of the human aggregation prone mutant that causes liver disease in α1-antitrypsin deficiency. This study provides powerful validation for advancement in preclinical drug discovery campaigns by screening live C. elegans modeling α1-antitrypsin deficiency and other complex disease phenotypes on high-content imaging platforms.
发展适用于活体动物生物活性化合物筛选的临床前模型是发现针对由错误折叠和易于聚集的蛋白质引起的疾病的有效治疗方法的一种有吸引力的方法。然而,一般来说,活体动物药物筛选既耗费人力和资源,又受到缺乏稳健的测定设计和高通量工作流程的阻碍。基于其体积小、组织透明和易于培养的特点,使用秀丽隐杆线虫应该可以避免许多与活体动物药物筛选相关的技术障碍。此外,它们的遗传可操作性和在提供人类疾病分子和细胞基础方面的出色记录,应该使秀丽隐杆线虫成为体内药物发现计划的理想模型系统。本研究的目的是确定秀丽隐杆线虫是否可以适应类似于为基于细胞的系统开发的高通量和高内涵药物筛选策略。我们使用表达荧光标记蛋白的转基因动物,首先开发了一种高质量、高通量的工作流程,利用带有集成图像采集和数据分析模块的自动化荧光显微镜平台,定性评估包括生长、组织发育、细胞活力和自噬在内的不同生物学过程。我们接下来将这项技术进行了改编,进行了小分子筛选,并鉴定出了改变引起α1-抗胰蛋白酶缺乏症肝脏疾病的人类易于聚集突变体在细胞内积累的化合物。本研究通过在高内涵成像平台上筛选模拟α1-抗胰蛋白酶缺乏症和其他复杂疾病表型的活体秀丽隐杆线虫,为临床前药物发现计划的进展提供了有力的验证。