ADP Hunter™ Assay for HTS of Kinase Inhibitors using the PHERAstar

BMG Labtech
Dr. Marjan Orban

By Dr. Marjan Orban, International Sales & Marketing Manager, BMG Labtech

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A new fluorescence-based kinase assay to measure the generation of ADP, a generic product of kinase activity

As mediators of eukaryotic signal transduction, controlling multiple cellular processes such as gene transcription, cell cycling, migration, apoptosis and differentiation, protein kinases are considered important targets in drug discovery. Kinase HTS screens ideally require kinase assay platforms with broad applicability in the inhibitor drug discovery process and are thus generically applicable to both the kinase target and substrate1.

Most non-radioactive kinase assay formats are limited in this respect in that they require either specific antibodies, or affinity capture reagents, to detect generation of the phosphorylated substrate. Often specific antibodies to the phosphorylated substrate are unavailable while affinity capture methods have limitations in the kinase assay conditions that can be used. During substrate phosphorylation, all kinases consume ATP and assays have been developed to measure ATP depletion occurring during the kinase reaction. However, this approach is limited by the ATP concentration required by the kinase, resulting in a high assay background. Consequently, small signal decreases, as occurs with weakly active kinases are difficult to detect.

An optimal approach is to measure the accumulation of a generic product of the kinase reaction i.e. ADP. This technique results in an increase in assay signal directly proportional to kinase activity and has the marked advantage that the assay is performed at a range of ATP concentrations, including those at the ATP Km value. Consequently, the inhibitory potency of novel compounds, when evaluated at the ATP Km, is a robust measure of activity at the ATP binding site and is easily compared to similar measurements at other kinases. Moreover, measurement of ADP accumulation allows flexibility in choice of the kinase substrate, so that both peptides and endogenous substrates (including during auto-phosphorylation) the kinase may be utilized.

ADP Hunter™ kinase screening assay principle: using an enzyme-coupled reaction that produce a positive red-shifted fluorescence signal

DiscoveRx has developed a homogeneous fluorescence based assay to measure the generation of ADP, a universal product of kinase activity2. The assay uses an enzyme-coupled reaction that produces a red-shifted fluorescence signal that is directly proportional to the amount of ADP in the solution. ADP Hunter is a biochemical assay to measure the accumulation of ADP (figure 1), a universal product of kinase enzyme activity.

Schematic principle of the ADP Hunter assay
Fig. 1: Schematic principle of the ADP Hunter assay

ADP Hunter™ is specifically designed for high throughput screening of kinase inhibitors. The assay has been designed for use in full-volume 384-well microplates, but can also be run in additional microplate formats. To allow for automation, a Stop Solution is also provided for added signal and background stabilization.
Unlike alternative generic approaches that monitor the depletion of ATP from a kinase reaction, this method follows the product of the reaction, and offers a convenient gain-of-signal assay format.

This kinase assay is a generic, non-radioactive method that doesn't require use of antibody. This application note describes the use of the ADP Hunter assay measured on BMG LABTECH's PHERAstar multimode HTS plate reader which combines rapid plate reading necessary for HTS with the enhanced performance and sensitivity needed to read small fluid volumes (figure 2).

PHERAstar high-end multimode plate reader
Fig. 2: BMG LABTECH's high-end multimode plate reader PHERAstar was used to perform the ADP Hunter kit.

The new multimode microplate reader has the flexibility to excel with the most demanding assays and is designed to read all leading HTS detection modes such as fluorescence intensity, time-resolved fluorescence, fluorescence polarization, luminescence and absorption in all formats up to 1536. The PHERAstar was run in fluorescence mode for the monitoring of the ADP Hunter demo kit (DiscoveRx Corporation, cat #90-0077) containing the following reagents:

Table 1: ADP Hunter demo kit components

Kit ComponentsVolumes
1ADP Hunter Reagent A8 ml
2ADP Hunter Reagent B15 ml
3ADP Hunter Stop Solution4 ml
4ADP Hunter Standard (360 µM)2ml
5ADP Hunter Assay Buffer20 ml


The standard curve for DiscoveRx's ADP Hunter kit was run according to the package insert protocol (table 2) in black walled 384-well plates (non-binding polypropylene plates; Greiner cat# 781209).

Table 2: ADP Hunter protocol for a standard curve

Full Volume 384-well PlateADP Standard
Step 1: Standard Dilutions8 µl ADP Standard dilutions
Step 2: ADP Detectiona) Add 8 µl Reagent A
b) Add 16 µl Reagent B
c) Incubate 60 minutes
Step 3: Stop SolutionAdd 4 µl Stop Solution
Read fluorescence intensity signal:
Resorufin excitation wavelength: 530-10 nm
Resorufin emission wavelength: 590-20 nm
Note: The Signal may be measured up to 2 hours after addition of
Stop Solution

The standard curve for DiscoveRx's ADP Hunter kit was run according to the package insert protocol (table 2) in black walled 384-well plates (non-binding polypropylene plates; Greiner cat# 781209).

The fluorescence signal (Ex: 530-10 nm / Em: 590-20) was read 1 hour after the addition of the last reagent on the BMG PHERAstar using the following protocol for plate reader setup (figure 3).

ADP Hunter assay setup window
Fig. 3: This screenshot shows the ADP Hunter assay setup window from the PHERAstar, an optical module for the ADP Hunter is directly available from BMG LABTECH.

High throughput detection of kinase activity

The ADP Hunter assay format was designed to produce a positive signal in direct proportion to the amount of ADP generated. The ADP standard curve is illustrated in the figure below (figure 4). The dynamic range of the assay is 1.5 μM to 120 μM ADP. The simple homogeneous assay format, with a single sixty minute incubation, provides robust and reproducible results with signal to background ratios > 10 and typical Z' values > 0.7.

Standard curve data run in 384-well format
Fig. 4: ADP Hunter standard curve data run in 384-well format

A series of product features make ADP Hunter the ideal screening solution, while maintaining an assay format that requires no waiting for or testing of antibodies, tolerates a broad range of ATP concentrations, and uses unmodified substrates or whole proteins.

ADP Hunter is based on enzyme couples reaction that produces a positive red-shifted fluorescence signal, minimizing interference from fluorescent compounds. In addition, ADP Hunter incorporates a stop solution, which stabilizes the detection signal for screening plates in batch mode.

Here we have described the value of a generic kinase screening assay when analyzed on a PHERAstar instrument. Together, they offer a powerful solution for kinase screening needs.

Conclusion

This novel technology recently developed and commercialized by DiscoveRx Corp provides generic approaches to kinases research and inhibitor. This assay is a useful tool for those customers who do not have access to a modified substrate, a phosphorylation-state specific antibody, or the ability or desire to use radioactivity.

These reagents are designed to be robust and applicable to high throughput fluid dispensing systems using simple plate readers. The PHERAstar with its innovative and user friendly, intuitive software allows for the greatest flexibility and ease of use.

References

1) Wesche H, Xiao SH, Young SW (2005) Comb Chem High Throughput Screening 8, 181-195
2) Charter NW, Kauffman L, Singh R, Eglen RM (2006) J Biomol Screen 0: 1087057106286829v1


Contribution authors:
Lindy Kauffman and Uyen Hguyen
DiscoveRx Corporation, Fremont, CA 94538, USA

Dr. Marjan Orban

Author Information - Dr. Marjan Orban

International Sales & Marketing Manager

Dr. Marjan Orban developed biosensors at the Institute for Chemical and Biochemical Sensor Research (ICB) and completed his Ph.D. degree in Analytical Chemistry at the University of Muenster (Germany) in 1999. He worked as a Research Associate in the field of diagnostic kits and as a lecturer at the Hong Kong University of Science & Technology. Dr. Orban started as Applications Specialist at the microplate reader manufacturer BMG LABTECH GmbH in Germany and is currently employed as International Sales & Marketing Manager.

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