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Liposomal Permeation Assay for Droplet-Scale Pharmacokinetic Screening

[Image: see text] Combinatorial library screening increasingly explores chemical space beyond the Ro5 (bRo5), which is useful for investigating ”undruggable” targets but suffers compromised cellular permeability and therefore bioavailability. Moreover, structure–permeation relationships for bRo5 mol...

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Autores principales: Hu, Juan, Chan, Alix I, Adaligil, Emel, Kekessie, Ivy, Takahashi, Mifune, Song, Aimin, Cunningham, Christian N., Paegel, Brian M.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2023
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10184116/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37075027
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.3c00138
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author Hu, Juan
Chan, Alix I
Adaligil, Emel
Kekessie, Ivy
Takahashi, Mifune
Song, Aimin
Cunningham, Christian N.
Paegel, Brian M.
author_facet Hu, Juan
Chan, Alix I
Adaligil, Emel
Kekessie, Ivy
Takahashi, Mifune
Song, Aimin
Cunningham, Christian N.
Paegel, Brian M.
author_sort Hu, Juan
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Combinatorial library screening increasingly explores chemical space beyond the Ro5 (bRo5), which is useful for investigating ”undruggable” targets but suffers compromised cellular permeability and therefore bioavailability. Moreover, structure–permeation relationships for bRo5 molecules are unclear partially because high-throughput permeation measurement technology for encoded combinatorial libraries is still nascent. Here, we present a permeation assay that is scalable to combinatorial library screening. A liposomal fluorogenic azide probe transduces permeation of alkyne-labeled molecules into small unilamellar vesicles via copper-catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition. Control alkynes (e.g., propargylamine, various alkyne-labeled PEGs) benchmarked the assay. Cell-permeable macrocyclic peptides, exemplary bRo5 molecules, were alkyne labeled and shown to retain permeability. The assay was miniaturized to microfluidic droplets with high assay quality (Z′ ≥ 0.5), demonstrating excellent discrimination of photocleaved known membrane-permeable and -impermeable model library beads. Droplet-scale permeation screening will enable pharmacokinetic mapping of bRo5 libraries to build predictive models.
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spelling pubmed-101841162023-05-16 Liposomal Permeation Assay for Droplet-Scale Pharmacokinetic Screening Hu, Juan Chan, Alix I Adaligil, Emel Kekessie, Ivy Takahashi, Mifune Song, Aimin Cunningham, Christian N. Paegel, Brian M. J Med Chem [Image: see text] Combinatorial library screening increasingly explores chemical space beyond the Ro5 (bRo5), which is useful for investigating ”undruggable” targets but suffers compromised cellular permeability and therefore bioavailability. Moreover, structure–permeation relationships for bRo5 molecules are unclear partially because high-throughput permeation measurement technology for encoded combinatorial libraries is still nascent. Here, we present a permeation assay that is scalable to combinatorial library screening. A liposomal fluorogenic azide probe transduces permeation of alkyne-labeled molecules into small unilamellar vesicles via copper-catalyzed azide–alkyne cycloaddition. Control alkynes (e.g., propargylamine, various alkyne-labeled PEGs) benchmarked the assay. Cell-permeable macrocyclic peptides, exemplary bRo5 molecules, were alkyne labeled and shown to retain permeability. The assay was miniaturized to microfluidic droplets with high assay quality (Z′ ≥ 0.5), demonstrating excellent discrimination of photocleaved known membrane-permeable and -impermeable model library beads. Droplet-scale permeation screening will enable pharmacokinetic mapping of bRo5 libraries to build predictive models. American Chemical Society 2023-04-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10184116/ /pubmed/37075027 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.3c00138 Text en © 2023 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Hu, Juan
Chan, Alix I
Adaligil, Emel
Kekessie, Ivy
Takahashi, Mifune
Song, Aimin
Cunningham, Christian N.
Paegel, Brian M.
Liposomal Permeation Assay for Droplet-Scale Pharmacokinetic Screening
title Liposomal Permeation Assay for Droplet-Scale Pharmacokinetic Screening
title_full Liposomal Permeation Assay for Droplet-Scale Pharmacokinetic Screening
title_fullStr Liposomal Permeation Assay for Droplet-Scale Pharmacokinetic Screening
title_full_unstemmed Liposomal Permeation Assay for Droplet-Scale Pharmacokinetic Screening
title_short Liposomal Permeation Assay for Droplet-Scale Pharmacokinetic Screening
title_sort liposomal permeation assay for droplet-scale pharmacokinetic screening
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10184116/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37075027
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.3c00138
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