Abstract
Cell culture and protein target-based compound screening strategies, though broadly utilized in selecting candidate compounds, often fail to eliminate candidate compounds with non-target effects and/or safety concerns until late in the drug developmental process. Phenotype screening using intact research animals is attractive because it can help identify small molecule candidate compounds that have a high probability of proceeding to clinical use. Most FDA approved, first-in-class small molecules were identified from phenotypic screening. However, phenotypic screening using rodent models is labor intensive, low-throughput, and very expensive. As a novel alternative for small molecule screening, we have been developing gene expression disease profiles, termed the Transcriptional Disease Signature (TDS), as readout of small molecule screens for therapeutic molecules. In this concept, compounds that can reverse, or otherwise affect known disease-associated gene expression patterns in whole animals may be rapidly identified for more detailed downstream direct testing of their efficacy and mode of action. To establish proof of concept for this screening strategy, we employed a transgenic strain of a small aquarium fish, medaka (Oryzias latipes), that overexpresses the malignant melanoma driver gene xmrk, a mutant egfr gene, that is driven by a pigment cell-specific mitf promoter. In this model, melanoma develops with 100% penetrance. Using the transgenic medaka malignant melanoma model, we established a screening system that employs the NanoString nCounter platform to quantify gene expression within custom sets of TDS gene targets that we had previously shown to exhibit differential transcription among xmrk-transgenic and wild-type medaka. Compound-modulated gene expression was identified using an internet-accessible custom-built data processing pipeline. The effect of a given drug on the entire TDS profile was estimated by comparing compound-modulated genes in the TDS using an activation Z-score and Kolmogorov-Smirnov statistics. TDS gene probes were designed that target common signaling pathways that include proliferation, development, toxicity, immune function, metabolism and detoxification. These pathways may be utilized to evaluate candidate compounds for potential favorable, or unfavorable, effects on melanoma-associated gene expression. Here we present the logistics of using medaka to screen compounds, as well as, the development of a user-friendly NanoString data analysis pipeline to support feasibility of this novel TDS drug-screening strategy.
Highlights
Targets thought to play a key role in disease etiology without consideration of collateral cellular, organ-level, or whole-body changes[2]
The xmrk oncogene is a mutant copy of fish Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor (EGFR) identified in the platyfish Xiphophorus maculatus[43]; xmrk overexpression in transgenic medaka leads to tumor development with 100% penetrance
Gene expression profiling in ten wt and ten tgmel medaka and differential gene expression analyses identified 222 Differentially Expressed Genes (DEGs) between wt and tg-mel medaka. These genes composed our Transcriptional Disease Signature (TDS) panel to be tested on the NanoString nCounter and represented putative transcriptional phenotype differences between wt and tg-mel medaka (Table S2)
Summary
Targets thought to play a key role in disease etiology without consideration of collateral cellular, organ-level, or whole-body changes[2]. Sophisticated automated screening systems exist for certain disease models (e.g., bone mineralization disorders, neurological disorders, stress, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, cardiovascular disease, mental illness)[8,30,35,36,37,38,39,40], traditional phenotypic screens using fish embryos or juveniles require manual scoring of phenotypic changes This time-consuming process limits throughput of this strategy. Fish and human melanocytes both appear in the epidermis, while mouse melanocytes occupy hair follicles[49] These attributes make xmrk-transgenic medaka a good model to screen potential anti-melanoma compounds and to establish the logistics of using the TDS concept as a screening tool
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