4.4 Article

High-content screening and profiling of drug activity in an automated centrosome-duplication assay

Journal

CHEMBIOCHEM
Volume 6, Issue 1, Pages 145-151

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/cbic.200400266

Keywords

bioinformatics; biological information; centrosomes; drugs; high-throughput screening

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [CA78048] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE [P01CA078048] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

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Maintenance of centrosome number is essential for cell-cycle progression and genomic stability, but investigation of this regulation has been limited by assay difficulty. We present a fully automated image-based centrosome-duplication assay that is accurate and robust enough for both careful cell-biology studies and high-throughput screening, and employ this assay in a series of chemical-genetic studies. We observe that a simple cytometric profiling strategy, which is based on organelle size, groups compounds with similar mechanisms of action; this suggests a simple strategy for excluding compounds that undesirably target such activities as protein synthesis and microtubule dynamics. Screening a library of compounds of known activity, we found unexpected effects on centrosome duplication by a number of drugs, most notably isoform-specific protein kinase C inhibitors and retinoic acid receptor agonists. From a 16320-member library of uncharacterized small molecules, we identified five potent centrosome-duplication inhibitors that do not target microtubule dynamics or protein synthesis. The analysis methodology reported here is directly relevant to studies of centrosome regulation in a variety of systems and is adaptable to a wide range of other biological problems.

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