3.9 Article

A High-Throughput Method to Identify Novel Senescence-Inducing Compounds

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMOLECULAR SCREENING
Volume 14, Issue 7, Pages 853-858

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/1087057109340314

Keywords

cellular senescence; high-throughput screen; prostate; prostate cancer

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [R01CA97131]
  2. University of Wisconsin George M. O'Brien Urology Research Center [1P50DK065303]
  3. John Livesey endowment
  4. Department of Defense Prostate Cancer Research Program [DAMD17-02-1-0163]
  5. NIH Ruth L. Kirchstein National Research Service [T32 CA009681-14]

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Cellular senescence is a persistently growth-arrested phenotype in normal and transformed cells induced by noncytotoxic stress. Cytostasis as a method of cancer treatment has recently generated significant interest. Research into the induction of cellular senescence as cancer therapy has been hindered by a lack of compounds that efficiently induce this response. The authors describe a semiautomated high-throughput method to identify library compounds that induce senescence using prostate cancer cells cultured in 96-well plates. Primary hits are identified by low cell numbers after 3 days in culture, measured by Hoechst 33342 fluorescence. A secondary visual assessment of senescence-associated beta-galactosidase staining and cellular morphology in the same wells distinguishes senescence from quiescence, apoptosis, and other false positives. This method was used to screen a 4160-compound library of known bioactive Compounds and natural products at a 10-mu M dose. Candidate Compounds were further selected based on persistent growth arrest after drug removal and increased expression of previously described senescence marker genes. Four lead compounds not previously associated with senescence were identified for further investigation. This is the first successful assay to identify novel agents from compound libraries based oil senescence induction in cancer cells. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2009:853-858)

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