Citation

  • Authors: Manoharan, G. B., Kopra, K., Eskonen, V., Harma, H., Abankwa, D.
  • Year: 2019
  • Journal: Anal Biochem 572 25-32
  • Applications: in vitro / DNA / jetPRIME
  • Cell type: HEK 293 EBNA
    Description: Transformed with adenovirus 5 DNA Increased recombinant protein yield with EBV oriP vector
    Known as: 293 c18 ; 293 EBNA ; ATCC® CRL-10852™

Method

2 µg DNA + 6 µL jetPRIME in 6-well plate

Abstract

The KRAS gene is highly mutated in human cancers and the focus of current Ras drug development efforts. Recently the interface between the C-terminus of K-Ras and calmodulin (CaM) was proposed as a target site to block K-Ras driven cancer cell stemness. We therefore aimed at developing a high-throughput amenable screening assay to identify novel CaM-inhibitors as potential K-Ras stemness-signaling disruptors. A modulated time-resolved Forster resonance energy transfer (mTR-FRET)-assay was developed and benchmarked against an identically designed fluorescence anisotropy (FA)-assay. In both assays, two CaM-binding peptides were labeled with Eu(III)-chelate or fluorescein and used as single-label reporter probes that were displaced from CaM upon competitor binding. Thus, peptidic and small molecule competitors with nanomolar to micromolar affinities to CaM could be detected, including a peptide that was derived from the C-terminus of K-Ras. In order to detect CaM-residue specific covalent inhibitors, a cell lysate-based Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET)-assay was furthermore established. This assay enabled us to measure the slow, residue-specific, covalent inhibition by ophiobolin A in the presence of other endogenous proteins. In conclusion, we have developed a panel of fluorescence-assays that allows identification of conventional and covalent CaM-inhibitors as potential disruptors of K-Ras driven cancer cell stemness.

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