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      Major Improvements in Robustness and Efficiency during the Screening of Novel Enzyme Effectors by the 3-Point Kinetics Assay.

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          Abstract

          The throughput level currently reached by automatic liquid handling and assay monitoring techniques is expected to facilitate the discovery of new modulators of enzyme activity. Judicious and dependable ways to interpret vast amounts of information are, however, required to effectively answer this challenge. Here, the 3-point method of kinetic analysis is proposed as a means to significantly increase the hit success rates and decrease the number of falsely identified compounds (false positives). In this post-Michaelis-Menten approach, each screened reaction is probed in three different occasions, none of which necessarily coincide with the initial period of constant velocity. Enzymology principles rather than subjective criteria are applied to identify unwanted outliers such as assay artifacts, and then to accurately distinguish true enzyme modulation effects from false positives. The exclusion and selection criteria are defined based on the 3-point reaction coordinates, whose relative positions along the time-courses may change from well to well or from plate to plate, if necessary. The robustness and efficiency of the new method is illustrated during a small drug repurposing screening of potential modulators of the deubiquinating activity of ataxin-3, a protein implicated in Machado-Joseph disease. Apparently, intractable Z factors are drastically enhanced after (1) eliminating spurious results, (2) improving the normalization method, and (3) increasing the assay resilience to systematic and random variability. Numerical simulations further demonstrate that the 3-point analysis is highly sensitive to specific, catalytic, and slow-onset modulation effects that are particularly difficult to detect by typical endpoint assays.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          SLAS Discov
          SLAS discovery : advancing life sciences R & D
          SAGE Publications
          2472-5560
          2472-5552
          Mar 2021
          : 26
          : 3
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Instituto de Ciências Biomédicas Abel Salazar (ICBAS), Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal.
          [2 ] Laboratório de Engenharia de Processos, Ambiente, Biotecnologia e Energia (LEPABE), Faculdade de Engenharia da Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal.
          [3 ] Instituto de Investigação e Inovação em Saúde, Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal.
          [4 ] Instituto de Biologia Molecular e Celular (IBMC), Universidade do Porto, Porto, Portugal.
          [5 ] International Iberian Nanotechnology Laboratory (INL), Braga, Portugal.
          Article
          S2472-5552(22)06686-2
          10.1177/2472555220958386
          32981414
          3396fd43-6ca9-4f8c-a4aa-a9ad1b9561d9
          History

          Machado–Joseph disease,ataxin-3,drug repurposing,enzyme kinetics,high-throughput screening

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