Fluorescence Polarization Assay for Small Molecule
Screening of FK506 Biosynthesized in 96-Well Microtiter Plates
Posted on 2017-08-25 - 00:00
The fluorescence
polarization (FP) assay has been widely used to
study enzyme kinetics, antibody–antigen interactions, and other
biological interactions. We propose that the FP assay can be adapted
as a high-throughput and potentially widely applicable screen for
small molecules. This is useful in metabolic engineering, which is
a promising approach to synthesizing compounds of pharmaceutical,
agricultural, and industrial importance using bioengineered strains.
There, the development of high-yield strains is often a costly and
time-consuming process. This problem can be addressed by generating
and testing large mutant strain libraries. However, a current key
bottleneck is the lack of high-throughput screens to detect the small
molecule products. The FP assay is quantitative, sensitive, fast,
and cheap. As a proof of principle, we established the FP assay to
screen for FK506 (tacrolimus) produced by Streptomyces tsukubaensis, which was cultivated in 96-well plates. An ultraviolet mutagenized
library of 160 colonies was screened to identify strains showing higher
FK506 productivities. The FP assay has the potential to be generalized
to detect a wide range of other small molecules.
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Ng, Yao Zong; Baldera-Aguayo, Pedro A.; Cornish, Virginia W. (2017). Fluorescence Polarization Assay for Small Molecule
Screening of FK506 Biosynthesized in 96-Well Microtiter Plates. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.7b00602