id5b00143_si_003.xlsx (1.1 MB)
Download fileHigh-Throughput Luciferase-Based Assay for the Discovery of Therapeutics That Prevent Malaria
dataset
posted on 2016-02-10, 00:00 authored by Justine Swann, Victoria Corey, Christina
A. Scherer, Nobutaka Kato, Eamon Comer, Micah Maetani, Yevgeniya Antonova-Koch, Christin Reimer, Kerstin Gagaring, Maureen Ibanez, David Plouffe, Anne-Marie Zeeman, Clemens H. M. Kocken, Case W. McNamara, Stuart L. Schreiber, Brice Campo, Elizabeth A. Winzeler, Stephan MeisterIn order to identify the most attractive
starting points for drugs that can be used to prevent malaria, a diverse
chemical space comprising tens of thousands to millions of small molecules
may need to be examined. Achieving this throughput necessitates the
development of efficient ultra-high-throughput screening methods.
Here, we report the development and evaluation of a luciferase-based
phenotypic screen of malaria exoerythrocytic-stage parasites optimized
for a 1536-well format. This assay uses the exoerythrocytic stage
of the rodent malaria parasite, Plasmodium berghei, and a human hepatoma cell line. We use this assay to evaluate several
biased and unbiased compound libraries, including two small sets of
molecules (400 and 89 compounds, respectively) with known activity
against malaria erythrocytic-stage parasites and a set of 9886 diversity-oriented
synthesis (DOS)-derived compounds. Of the compounds screened, we obtain
hit rates of 12–13 and 0.6% in preselected and naïve
libraries, respectively, and identify 52 compounds with exoerythrocytic-stage
activity less than 1 μM and having minimal host cell toxicity.
Our data demonstrate the ability of this method to identify compounds
known to have causal prophylactic activity in both human and animal
models of malaria, as well as novel compounds, including some exclusively
active against parasite exoerythrocytic stages.