In
case you have any further technical questions, please contact our
technical support team:
What information do I gain from ATPase assays?
Membrane
vesicles containing ABC transporters can be used to measure the
ATPase activity of the transporter. Changes in the activity of the
transporter in the presence of a test drug indicate that there is an
interaction between the test drug and the transporter assayed.
What
information do I gain from vesicular transport assays?
Membrane
preparations, if they contain inside-out vesicles in adequate
amount, can be used to measure the actual transport of the molecules
using the vesicular transport assay. If the test drug
is a transported substrate of the transporter it will translocate
in this assay from the buffer into the membrane vesicles. Membrane vesicles can be
separated from the rest of the compounds by rapid filtration and the
amount of transported substrate can be measured. In laboratories lacking the
proper analytical hardware (LC/MS/MS or HPLC) vesicular transport assays can
be run in a competition format using radioactive reference substances.
What
information do I gain from whole cell-based assays (Calcein assay
for MDR1 and MRP1, Hoechst dye extrusion assay for MXR)?
Whole
cell based assays provide information that is relevant to living cells. These
methods, together with ATPase and vesicular transport, can give a
clear insight into the interaction of the test compound with the
transporters assayed. In case of ambiguous results, whole cell assays can be
used to confirm data generated on vesicular transport and ATPase assays.
Are membrane products supplied with the two assays
(ATPase or vesicular transport) the same or different in any way?
Membrane
preparations always contain some closed
membrane vesicles that are in inside-out orientation (under 16% of
total lipid). In these inside-out vesicle preparations, the transport of
substrates across the membrane takes molecules from the buffer into the
membrane vesicle.
Vesicles sold as "for vesicular assays" are validated for both
vesicular and ATPase assays, while vesicles sold as "for ATPase assays"
are validated only for ATPase.
Does
freezing and thawing ruin membrane vesicles?
Repeated
freezing and thawing has very little effect on the ATPase activity of
the transporters. Yet, it can ruin the vesicular structure of the
membrane preparation. Thus, it is recommended to store membrane preparations
in small aliquots.
What
ATP brand is suitable for ATPase assays?
The
ATPase assay in very sensitive to the quality of the ATP used. ATP is
available from several vendors, but unfortunately some
batches do not meet the quality requirements necessary to run the
ATPase assay. We have very good experience with ATP purchased from
Sigma (see protocol for catalogue numbers), so if you are
concerned with the quality of ATP we suggest purchasing from this
vendor.
Why
add glutathione to the assay mix in MRP1 and MRP2 membrane based
studies?
The
MRP1 and MRP2 transporters are known to transport some small,
positively charged or hydrophobic molecules only in the presence of
glutathione (co-transport), which is readily available in living
cells. Also, in the ATPase assay some drugs only modulate the ATPase
activity of the MRP1 and MRP2 transporters in the presence of
glutathione. Therefore, we suggest assaying the interaction of the
test drugs with the MRP1 and MRP2 transporters with and without the
presence of 2 mM glutathione (added to the assay mix).
What
organic solvents can be used in what concentration without affecting
the performance of the assay?
Membrane-based assays tolerate the most widespread organic solvents used in
the pharmaceutical industry (DMSO, ethanol, methanol) up to 2%. Whole
cell-based assays are more sensitive; we suggest keeping the
concentration of these solvents under 1%.
How
many substances can I test with 1 mg membrane preparations in the
ATPase assay?
We
perform the ATPase assay on 96-well plates, adding 20-40 µg of membrane
preparation per well. We run 8 concentrations, 2 duplicates and two
types of assays (activation + inhibition) per compound. This way
we normally test 2 compounds per plate, using up about 76 wells (64
assay + 12 control), using ~3 mg membrane (~1.5 mg membrane /
compound). For basic screening the number of assays per
compound can be decreased according to one's actual needs.
How
many substances can I test with 1 mg membrane preparations in the
vesicular transport assay?
We recommend to use 50 µg membrane preparations per well for transport inhibition assay readout or HPLC analysis, or LC/MS-MS analysis. Regarding testing strategies, see the ATPase
description above.
Can
I perform the vesicular transport assay also with different readouts
e.g. HPLC or LC/MS-MS?
Our
protocol is optimized for a competition type assay set-up, using a
labelled reporter compound, however, HPLC or LC/MS-MS can also be
used.
Why
does SOLVO use mostly Sf9 insect cells instead of mammalian cells?
The
baculovirus-insect cell system has many advantages over mammalian
cells or the membranes prepared from mammalian cells.
The
baculovirus insect cell system is easy-to-use and gives high
expression of the transduced gene.
Obviously
no other mammalian transporters are present in the insect cells.
In
addition, the endogenous expression of the insect cell proteins is
down-regulated upon baculovirus infection.
The
MDR transporter expression profile in some cell-lines, particularly
the drug-selected ones is somewhat unstable. Additional care must be
taken for standardization, validation on a regular basis.
One exception is the MXR protein, where membranes derived from mammalian cells are also used.
This is a very special case, where Sf9 cells have a major drawback against Sf9 cells in the
ATPase assay (for details see FAQ #17)
Is
it possible to obtain the expression systems (recombinant
baculovirus or selected cell lines) from SOLVO Biotechnology for in-house Sf9/mammalian membrane
production?
It
is not our business policy to sell recombinant baculoviruses
containing the transporter cDNA or the virus-infected Sf9 cells
directly, or the selected mammalian cell lines. We provide well-manufactured and standardized membrane products, equipped with datasheets to enable a strict quality
control. We believe that a long-term membrane support agreement is
more economical for our customers than dedicating their own
resources to membrane production. It is our experience that producing
standardized, high-expression level membrane preparations has caused
problems even in some wellprepared labs at large pharmaceutical companies.
Are
the membranes patented? Do I need sublicense for cDNA?
The preparation of Sf9 membrane products includes a step of transfection
with cDNA. For some corporate users, cDNA usage sublicences might be
required from third parties for some ABC transporters in some countries.
Although we truly believe that our customers are not exposed to any risk of patent
infringement, this is not a fully clear situation in case of some ABC
transporters (mainly in the US, where cDNA is patentable – in
the EU one cannot patent cDNA).
Membrane products from selected mammalian cell lines are not exposed
to such potential legal risk.
What is the difference between the wild type and the mutant
(R482G) form of the MXR transporter?
SOLVO Biotechnology offers two variants of the MXR(ABCG2) transporter:
the wild type form and one mutant variant.
So far only the wild type variant was found in the human population,
while the mutant variant was present in some drug-selected cell lines.
The substrate specificity of the two forms has also been reported to be different
(Ozvegy et al., 2002). Vesicle preparations containing the wild type transporter
can be used in human pharmacokinetic studies, while preparations containing the
mutant variant are recommended to be utilized in academic research.
Which MXR membrane preparation should I use in my ATPase
and Vesicular Transport assays: Sf9 or mammalian?
The MXR transporter shows a significantly higher intristic ATPase activity
than most ABC transporters.
This basal activity has been attributed to activators (MXR substrates)
that are present in the membrane preparations.
Depending on the type of membrane preparation, this activating effect can be different.
In case of membrane preparations from insect cells (SB-MXR-Sf9-ATPase),
the baseline activity is very high, so most interacting compounds actually inhibit
this baseline activity. In case of membranes prepared from mammalian cells (SB-MXR-M-ATPase),
the baseline activity is lower, and some interacting compounds inhibit,
while known transported substrates activate the baseline activity.
Therefore, the membrane preparations from mammalian cells can be used to search
for transported substrates, while the insect membrane preparation is suitable
for screening interacting compounds. Also, membranes from mammalian cell lines
have higher endogenous ATPase levels, which result in a higher non-transporter
related background in the ATPase assay. In vesicular transport assays,
the two types of membranes behave similarly.
Last updated: May 15, 2008
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