4.4 Article

Affinity selection-mass spectrometry for the discovery of pharmacologically active compounds from combinatorial libraries and natural products

Journal

JOURNAL OF MASS SPECTROMETRY
Volume 56, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jms.4647

Keywords

affinity selection-mass spectrometry; combinatorial libraries; high-throughput screening; magnetic microbeads; natural products; size exclusion chromatography; ultrafiltration

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Affinity selection-mass spectrometry (AS-MS) was invented to address the high-throughput screening demands of combinatorial chemistry, utilizing binding interactions between ligands and receptors to isolate pharmacologically active compounds from mixtures of small molecules. AS-MS has three main approaches: pulsed ultrafiltration (PUF) AS-MS, size exclusion chromatography (SEC) AS-MS, and magnetic microbead affinity selection screening (MagMASS), with the capacity to screen hundreds of thousands of compounds per day.
Invented to address the high-throughput screening (HTS) demands of combinatorial chemistry, affinity selection-mass spectrometry (AS-MS) utilizes binding interactions between ligands and receptors to isolate pharmacologically active compounds from mixtures of small molecules and then relies on the selectivity, sensitivity, and speed of mass spectrometry to identify them. No radiolabels, fluorophores, or chromophores are required. Although many variations of AS-MS have been devised, three approaches have emerged as the most flexible, productive, and popular, and they differ primarily in how ligand-receptor complexes are separated from nonbinding compounds in the mixture. These are pulsed ultrafiltration (PUF) AS-MS, size exclusion chromatography (SEC) AS-MS, and magnetic microbead affinity selection screening (MagMASS). PUF and SEC AS-MS are solution-phase screening approaches, and MagMASS uses receptors immobilized on magnetic microbeads. Because pools of compounds are screened using AS-MS, each containing hundreds to thousands of potential ligands, hundreds of thousands of compounds can be screened per day. AS-MS is also compatible with complex mixtures of chemically diverse natural products in extracts of botanicals and fungi and microbial cultures, which often contain fluorophores and chromophores that can interfere with convention HTS. Unlike conventional HTS, AS-MS may be used to discover ligands binding to allosteric as well as orthosteric receptor sites, and AS-MS has been useful for discovering ligands to targets that are not easily incorporated into conventional HTS such as membrane-bound receptors.

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