In vivo quantitative high-throughput screening for drug discovery and comparative toxicology

Dis Model Mech. 2023 Mar 1;16(3):dmm049863. doi: 10.1242/dmm.049863. Epub 2023 Mar 20.

Abstract

Quantitative high-throughput screening (qHTS) pharmacologically evaluates chemical libraries for therapeutic uses, toxicological risk and, increasingly, for academic probe discovery. Phenotypic high-throughput screening assays interrogate molecular pathways, often relying on cell culture systems, historically less focused on multicellular organisms. Caenorhabditis elegans has served as a eukaryotic model organism for human biology by virtue of genetic conservation and experimental tractability. Here, a paradigm enabling C. elegans qHTS using 384-well microtiter plate laser-scanning cytometry is described, in which GFP-expressing organisms revealing phenotype-modifying structure-activity relationships guide subsequent life-stage and proteomic analyses, and Escherichia coli bacterial ghosts, a non-replicating nutrient source, allow compound exposures over two life cycles, mitigating bacterial overgrowth complications. We demonstrate the method with libraries of anti-infective agents, or substances of toxicological concern. Each was tested in seven-point titration to assess the feasibility of nematode-based in vivo qHTS, and examples of follow-up strategies were provided to study organism-based chemotype selectivity and subsequent network perturbations with a physiological impact. We anticipate that this qHTS approach will enable analysis of C. elegans orthologous phenotypes of human pathologies to facilitate drug library profiling for a range of therapeutic indications.

Keywords: C. elegans; Drug discovery; Genetic disorders; High-throughput screening; Infectious disease; Laser cytometry; Model organisms; Proteomics.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Intramural

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Caenorhabditis elegans* / genetics
  • Drug Discovery / methods
  • High-Throughput Screening Assays* / methods
  • Humans
  • Proteomics
  • Small Molecule Libraries / pharmacology

Substances

  • Small Molecule Libraries