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Delay of Intracellular Calcium Transients Using a Calcium Chelator: Application to High-Throughput Screening of the Capsaicin Receptor Ion Channel and G-Protein-Coupled Receptors

✍ Scribed by Stephan K. Grant; Alka Bansal; Anjalee Mitra; Scott D. Feighner; Ge Dai; Gregory J. Kaczorowski; Richard E. Middleton


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2001
Tongue
English
Weight
169 KB
Volume
294
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-2697

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✦ Synopsis


Whole-cell functional assays are often used for high-throughput screening (HTS) of molecular targets such as ion channels and G-protein-coupled receptors. A common method for assaying the activity of these membrane proteins is to measure the change in intracellular calcium concentration upon receptor stimulation. These changes in calcium concentration are typically transient and therefore not readily adapted to high-density plate formats used in HTS instruments. We have demonstrated that an intracellular calcium chelator, BAPTA, was able to delay by 5- to 20-fold and extend for several minutes the observed calcium signals initiated by extracellular calcium influx or release of calcium from intracellular stores. As examples, we used cells expressing a calcium-permeable ion channel, vanilloid receptor type 1 (the capsaicin receptor), and two G-protein-coupled receptors. These receptor-mediated increases in intracellular calcium concentration were measured by both fluorescence-based and luminescence-based detection methods. The use of an intracellular calcium chelator to delay calcium signaling should have wide application since it allows the measurement of the functional activity of any cellular receptor that signals through calcium. With this procedure, calcium fluorescence and luminescence whole-cell functional assays may be performed with standard laboratory pipetting and detection systems.