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High-throughput screening

 
Genetics Encyclopedia: High-Throughput Screening

High-throughput screening (HTS) is an automated method for rapidly analyzing the activity of thousands of chemical compounds. It has become a key tool in modern drug discovery. Paired with combinatorial chemistry and bioinformatics, HTS allows potential drugs to be quickly and efficiently screened to find candidates that should be explored in more detail.

How the Process Works

Most drugs work by binding to a protein target on or in a living cell. One of the first steps in drug discovery and development is finding molecules that will bind to the target. Imagine, for instance, you want to develop an anticancer drug that binds to and inactivates a particular mutant protein known to promote aberrant cell growth. You have a couple of compounds that bind very weakly to your protein, and these serve as the starting point for generating a large number of related compounds, through combinatorial chemistry. In this method, many thousands of related compounds can be quickly and automatically synthesized. Those that bind best can be modified and tested further, and ultimately may go on to be tested in animals and people as candidate drug therapies.

Initial screening of these compounds for their binding ability is the job for HTS. The key to HTS is to develop a test, or assay, in which binding between a compound and a protein causes some visible change that can be automatically read by a sensor. Typically the change is emission of light by a fluorophore in the reaction mixture. One way to make this occur is to attach the fluorophore to the target protein in such a way that its ability to fluoresce is diminished (quenched) when the protein binds to another molecule. A different system measures the difference in a particular property of light (polarization) emitted by bound versus unbound fluorophores. Bound fluorophores are more highly polarized, and this can be detected by sensors. Other detection methods are possible as well.

The details of HTS differ with different systems, but all depend on automated or robotic systems to combine the chemicals and read the outputs. Reactions between the target protein and the compound usually occur in microplates, which are plastic trays with multiple indentations, or wells. Systems currently in use can handle plates with 96, 384, 1,536, or even higher numbers of wells at once. HTS typically uses extremely small volumes in each well, often 10 microliters or less. Small volumes have numerous advantages, including keeping to a minimum the amount of each compound used. This is especially important for many proteins targets, which may be difficult and costly to isolate and purify.

The time required for reactions varies with the substances involved, and may range from several minutes to several hours. Fast robotic systems combined with rapid reactions can screen 10,000 or more compounds in a single day. This is an enormous increase over traditional chemical assays, in which a chemist may be able to handle fewer than 100 tests in the same amount of time.

The Uses of Hts Assays

Storing, processing, analyzing, and accessing the wealth of data generated in an HTS assay poses special problems, simply because there is so much of it. Bioinformatics strategies are used to develop databases relating chemical structure, target characteristics, and assay results, allowing researchers to learn more from their results than just whether or not a particular compound was successful. Analyzing the common features of successful compounds may lead to rational development of better drug candidates.

High-throughput technology can also be put to use in other areas besides drug development. Indeed, any system in which there are many similar candidates to be screened, and in which a visible output can be designed, is amenable to high-throughput methods. Genomics applications are a principal area for applying HTS technology, in DNA sequencing, protein analysis, and other fields. HTS methods can be combined with DNA microarray technology, for instance, to analyze the expression of hundreds of different genes under varying conditions.

Bibliography

Brush, Michael. "High-Throughput Technology Picks Up Steam." Scientist 13, no. 4 (February 15, 1999): 11.

Internet Resource

High Throughput Screening. http://www.htscreening.net/.

—Richard Robinson

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Wikipedia: High-throughput screening
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High-throughput screening (HTS) is a method for scientific experimentation especially used in drug discovery and relevant to the fields of biology and chemistry.

Contents

Purpose and method

Using robotics, data processing and control software, liquid handling devices, and sensitive detectors, High-Throughput Screening or HTS allows a researcher to quickly conduct millions of biochemical, genetic or pharmacological tests. Through this process one can rapidly identify active compounds, antibodies or genes which modulate a particular biomolecular pathway. The results of these experiments provide starting points for drug design and for understanding the interaction or role of a particular biochemical process in biology.

In essence, HTS uses automation to run a screen of an assay [1] against a library of candidate compounds. An assay is a test for specific activity: usually inhibition or stimulation of a biochemical or biological mechanism. Typical HTS screening libraries or "decks" can contain from 100,000 to more than 2,000,000 compounds (circa 2008).

The key labware or testing vessel of HTS is the microtiter plate: a small container, usually disposable and made of plastic, that features a grid of small, open divots called wells. Modern (circa 2008) microplates for HTS generally have either 384, 1536, or 3456 wells. These are all multiples of 96, reflecting the original 96 well microplate with 8 x 12 9mm spaced wells. Most of the wells contain experimentally useful matter, often an aqueous solution of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) and some other chemical compound, the latter of which is different for each well across the plate. (The other wells may be empty, intended for use as optional experimental controls.)

To prepare for an assay, the researcher fills each well of the plate with some biological entity that he or she wishes to conduct the experiment upon, such as a protein, some cells, or an animal embryo. After some incubation time has passed to allow the biological matter to absorb, bind to, or otherwise react (or fail to react) with the compounds in the wells, measurements are taken across all the plate's wells, either manually or by a machine. Manual measurements are often necessary when the researcher is using microscopy to (for example) seek changes or defects in embryonic development caused by the wells' compounds, looking for effects that a computer could not easily determine by itself. Otherwise, a specialized automated analysis machine can run a number of experiments on the wells (such as shining polarized light on them and measuring reflectivity, which can be an indication of protein binding). In this case, the machine outputs the result of each experiment as a grid of numeric values, with each number mapping to the value obtained from a single well. A high-capacity analysis machine can measure dozens of plates in the space of a few minutes like this, generating thousands of experimental datapoints very quickly.

Depending on the results of this first assay, the researcher can perform follow up assays within the same screen by "cherrypicking" liquid from the source wells that gave interesting results (known as "hits") into new assay plates, and then re-running the experiment to collect further data on this narrowed set, confirming and refining observations.

A screening facility typically holds a library of stock plates, whose contents are carefully catalogued, and each of which may have been created by the lab or obtained from a commercial source. These stock plates themselves are not directly used in experiments; instead, separate assay plates are created as needed. An assay plate is simply a copy of a stock plate, created by pipetteing a small amount of liquid (often measured in nanoliters) from the wells of a stock plate to the corresponding wells of a completely empty plate.

Automation is an important element in HTS's usefulness. Typically, an integrated robot system consisting of one or more robots transports assay-microplates from station to station for sample and reagent addition, mixing, incubation, and finally readout or detection. An HTS system can usually prepare, incubate, and analyze many plates simultaneously, further speeding the data-collection process. HTS robots currently exist which can test up to 100,000 compounds per day (Hann 2004). The term uHTS or ultra high throughput screening refers (circa 2008) to screening in excess of 100,000 compounds per day.

HTS is a relatively recent innovation, made lately feasible through modern advances in robotics and high-speed computer technology. It still takes a highly specialized and expensive screening lab to run an HTS operation, however, so in many cases a small-to-moderately sized research institution will use the services of an existing HTS facility rather than set up one for itself.

There is a trend in academia to be their own drug discovery enterprise. ( High-throughput screening goes to school) Facilities which normally only industry had can now increasingly be found as well at universities. UCLA for example features an HTS laboratory (Molecular Screening Shared Resources (MSSR, UCLA)) which can screen up to 100,000 compounds a day on a routine basis. The University of Illinois also has a facility for HTS, as does the University of Minnesota.

In the United States, the National Institute of Health or NIH has created a nationwide consortium of small molecule screening centers that has been recently funded to produce innovative chemical tools for use in biological research. The Molecular Libraries Screening Center Network or MLSCN performs HTS on assays provided by the research community, against a large library of small molecules maintained in a central molecule repository.([2])

For more information see Laboratory automation

Techniques for increased throughput

Unique distributions of compounds across one or many plates can be employed to increase either the number of assays per plate, or to reduce the variance of assay results, or both. The simplifying assumption made in this approach is that any N compounds in the same well will not typically interact with each other, or the assay target, in a manner that fundamentally changes the ability of the assay to detect true hits.

For example, imagine a plate where compound A is in wells 1-2-3, compound B is in wells 2-3-4, and compound C is in wells 3-4-5. In an assay of this plate against a given target, a hit in wells 2, 3, and 4 would indicate that compound B is the most likely agent, while also providing three measurements of compound B's efficacy against the specified target. Commercial applications of this approach involve combinations in which no two compounds ever share more than one well, to reduce the (second-order) possibility of interference between pairs of compounds being screened.

Dosage form==See also==

Further reading

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Genetics Encyclopedia. Genetics. Copyright © 2003 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
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