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Correlation of Optical and Automated Patch Clamp Electrophysiology for Identification of NaV1.7 Inhibitors

Authors :
Owen B. McManus
Vivian Hecht
Violeta Yu
Chris M Hempel
Graham T. Dempsey
Ryan J. Babcock
Michael Jarosh
Joseph G. McGivern
Hongkang Zhang
Kevin Dong
Bryan D. Moyer
Christopher A. Werley
Source :
SLAS Discovery. 25:434-446
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2020.

Abstract

The voltage-gated sodium channel Nav1.7 is a genetically validated target for pain; pharmacological blockers are promising as a new class of nonaddictive therapeutics. The search for Nav1.7 subtype selective inhibitors requires a reliable, scalable, and sensitive assay. Previously, we developed an all-optical electrophysiology (Optopatch) Spiking HEK platform to study activity-dependent modulation of Nav1.7 in a format compatible with high-throughput screening. In this study, we benchmarked the Optopatch Spiking HEK assay with an existing validated automated electrophysiology assay on the IonWorks Barracuda (IWB) platform. In a pilot screen of 3520 compounds, which included compound plates from a random library as well as compound plates enriched for Nav1.7 inhibitors, the Optopatch Spiking HEK assay identified 174 hits, of which 143 were confirmed by IWB. The Optopatch Spiking HEK assay maintained the high reliability afforded by traditional fluorescent assays and further demonstrated comparable sensitivity to IWB measurements. We speculate that the Optopatch assay could provide an affordable high-throughput screening platform to identify novel Nav1.7 subtype selective inhibitors with diverse mechanisms of action, if coupled with a multiwell parallel optogenetic recording instrument.

Details

ISSN :
24725552
Volume :
25
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SLAS Discovery
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b158bb79b66d537a5d39c6d8bdd18fe7
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/2472555220914532