3.9 Article

Live-Cell Imaging of Caspase Activation for High-Content Screening

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR SCREENING
Volume 14, Issue 8, Pages 956-969

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1087057109343207

Keywords

high-content assay; RNAi HT screening; chemical HT screening; caspase; apoptosis; cancer; live cells

Funding

  1. Mr. William H. Goodwin Mrs. Alice Goodwin and the Commonwealth Foundation for Cancer Research
  2. Experimental Therapeutics Center of MSKCC
  3. William Randolph Hearst Fund in Experimental Therapeutics
  4. Lilian S. Wells Foundation
  5. NIH/NCl Cancer Center Support [5 P30 CA008748-44]

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Caspases are central to the execution of programmed cell death,. and their activation constitutes the biochemical hallmark of apoptosis. In this article, the authors report the successful adaptation of a high-content assay method using the DEVD-NucView488 (TM) fluorogenic Substrate, and for the first time, they show caspase activation in live cells induced by either drugs or siRNA. The fluorogenic substrate was found to be nontoxic over an exposure period of several days, during which the authors demonstrate automated imaging and quantification of caspase activation of the same cell population as a function of time. Overexpression of the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-XL, alone or in combination with the inhibitor Z-VAD-FMK, attenuated caspase activation in HeLa cells exposed to doxorubicin, etoposide, or cell death siRNA. This method was further validated against 2 well-characterized NSCLC cell lines reported to be sensitive (H3255) or refractory (H2030) to erlotinib, where the authors show a differential time-dependent activation was observed for H3255 and no significant changes in H2030, consistent with their respective chemosensitivity profile. In summary, the results demonstrate the feasibility of using this newly adapted and validated high-content assay to screen chemical or RNAi libraries for the identification of previously uncovered enhancers and Suppressors of the apoptotic machinery in live cells. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2009:956-969)

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