4.7 Article

A Large-Scale High-Throughput Screen for Modulators of SERCA Activity

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom12121789

Keywords

calcium ATPase; calcium transport; drug discovery; membrane transport; cardiac muscle; heart failure

Funding

  1. NIH grants
  2. AHA grant [R01HL139065, R37AG026160]
  3. [20CDA35310575]

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The sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (SERCA) is a critical ion pump for muscle function, and increasing its activity could alleviate muscle dysfunction. Through high-throughput screening, several compounds were discovered that can activate SERCA and improve calcium uptake in both cardiac and skeletal muscles.
The sarco/endoplasmic reticulum Ca-ATPase (SERCA) is a P-type ion pump that transports Ca2+ from the cytosol into the endoplasmic/sarcoplasmic reticulum (ER/SR) in most mammalian cells. It is critically important in muscle, facilitating relaxation and enabling subsequent contraction. Increasing SERCA expression or specific activity can alleviate muscle dysfunction, most notably in the heart, and we seek to develop small-molecule drug candidates that activate SERCA. Therefore, we adapted an NADH-coupled assay, measuring Ca-dependent ATPase activity of SERCA, to high-throughput screening (HTS) format, and screened a 46,000-compound library of diverse chemical scaffolds. This HTS platform yielded numerous hits that reproducibly alter SERCA Ca-ATPase activity, with few false positives. The top 19 activating hits were further tested for effects on both Ca-ATPase and Ca2+ transport, in both cardiac and skeletal SR. Nearly all hits increased Ca2+ uptake in both cardiac and skeletal SR, with some showing isoform specificity. Furthermore, dual analysis of both activities identified compounds with a range of effects on Ca2+-uptake and ATPase, which fit into distinct classifications. Further study will be needed to identify which classifications are best suited for therapeutic use. These results reinforce the need for robust secondary assays and criteria for selection of lead compounds, before undergoing HTS on a larger scale.

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