Screening assays using target-based affinity selection coupled with high-sensitivity detection technologies to identify small-molecule hits from chemical libraries can provide a useful discovery approach that complements traditional assay systems. Affinity selection-mass spectrometry (AS-MS) is one such methodology that holds promise for providing selective and sensitive high-throughput screening platforms. Although AS-MS screening platforms have been used to discover small-molecule ligands of proteins from many target families, they have not yet been used routinely to screen integral membrane proteins. The authors present a proof-of-concept study using size exclusion chromatography coupled to AS-MS to perform a primary screen for small-molecule ligands of the purified muscarinic M2 acetylcholine receptor, a G-protein-coupled receptor. AS-MS is used to characterize the binding mechanisms of 2 newly discovered ligands. NGD-3350 is a novel M2-specific orthosteric antagonist of M2 function. NGD-3366 is an allosteric ligand with binding properties similar to the allosteric antagonist W-84, which decreases the dissociation rate of N-methyl-scopolamine from the M2 receptor. Binding properties of the ligands discerned from AS-MS assays agree with those from in vitro biochemical assays. The authors conclude that when used with appropriate small-molecule libraries, AS-MS may provide a useful high-throughput assay system for the discovery and characterization of all classes of integral membrane protein ligands, including allosteric modulators. © 2006 Society for Biomolecular Sciences.
CITATION STYLE
Whitehurst, C. E., Nazef, N., Annis, D. A., Hou, Y., Murphy, D. M., Spacciapoli, P., … Nash, H. M. (2006). Discovery and characterization of orthosteric and allosteric muscarinic M2 acetylcholine receptor ligands by affinity selection-mass spectrometry. Journal of Biomolecular Screening, 11(2), 194–207. https://doi.org/10.1177/1087057105284340
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