Monitoring drug–target interactions through target engagement-mediated amplification on arrays and in situ

Author:

Al-Amin Rasel A1ORCID,Johansson Lars2,Abdurakhmanov Eldar3,Landegren Nils45,Löf Liza1,Arngården Linda5,Blokzijl Andries1,Svensson Richard6,Hammond Maria1,Lönn Peter1,Haybaeck Johannes78,Kamali-Moghaddam Masood1,Jensen Annika Jenmalm2,Danielson U Helena3ORCID,Artursson Per6,Lundbäck Thomas2,Landegren Ulf1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology, Science for Life Laboratory, Uppsala University , Uppsala, Sweden

2. Department of Medical Biochemistry and Biophysics, Chemical Biology Consortium Sweden (CBCS), Science for Life Laboratory, Karolinska Institutet , Solna, Sweden

3. Department of Chemistry-BMC, Science for Life Laboratory, Uppsala University , Uppsala, Sweden

4. Center for Molecular Medicine, Department of Medicine (Solna), Science for Life Laboratory, Karolinska Institutet , Solna, Sweden

5. Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala University , Uppsala, Sweden

6. Department of Pharmacy, Uppsala University Drug Optimization and Pharmaceutical Profiling (UDOPP), Science for Life Laboratory, Uppsala University , Uppsala, Sweden

7. Institute of Pathology, Neuropathology and Molecular Pathology, Medical University of Innsbruck , Innsbruck, Austria

8. Diagnostic and Research Institute of Pathology, Medical University of Graz , Graz, Austria

Abstract

Abstract Drugs are designed to bind their target proteins in physiologically relevant tissues and organs to modulate biological functions and elicit desirable clinical outcomes. Information about target engagement at cellular and subcellular resolution is therefore critical for guiding compound optimization in drug discovery, and for probing resistance mechanisms to targeted therapies in clinical samples. We describe a target engagement-mediated amplification (TEMA) technology, where oligonucleotide-conjugated drugs are used to visualize and measure target engagement in situ, amplified via rolling-circle replication of circularized oligonucleotide probes. We illustrate the TEMA technique using dasatinib and gefitinib, two kinase inhibitors with distinct selectivity profiles. In vitro binding by the dasatinib probe to arrays of displayed proteins accurately reproduced known selectivity profiles, while their differential binding to fixed adherent cells agreed with expectations from expression profiles of the cells. We also introduce a proximity ligation variant of TEMA to selectively investigate binding to specific target proteins of interest. This form of the assay serves to improve resolution of binding to on- and off-target proteins. In conclusion, TEMA has the potential to aid in drug development and clinical routine by conferring valuable insights in drug–target interactions at spatial resolution in protein arrays, cells and in tissues.

Funder

Swedish Research Council

Torsten Söderbergs Stiftelse

European Research Council

European Union Seventh Framework Programme

ERC

ProteinSeq

Swedish Collegium for Advanced Studies

Ulf Landegren Department of Immunology, Genetics and Pathology, Uppsala University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics

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