Phase-separated condensate-aided enrichment of biomolecular interactions for high-throughput drug screening in test tubes.

2020 
Modification-dependent and -independent biomolecular interactions, including protein-protein, protein-DNA/RNA, protein-sugar, and protein-lipid interactions, play crucial roles in all cellular processes. Dysregulation of these biomolecular interactions or malfunction of the associated enzymes results in various diseases; therefore, these interactions and enzymes are attractive targets for therapies. High-throughput screening can greatly facilitate the discovery of drugs for these targets. Here, we describe a biomolecular interaction detection method, called phase-separated condensate-aided enrichment of biomolecular interactions in test tubes (CEBIT). The readout of CEBIT is the selective recruitment of biomolecules into phase-separated condensates harboring their cognate binding partners. We tailored CEBIT to detect various biomolecular interactions and activities of biomolecule-modifying enzymes. Using CEBIT-based high-throughput screening assays, we identified known inhibitors of the p53- MDM2 proto-oncogene (MDM2) interaction and of the histone methyltransferase suppressor of variegation 3-9 homolog 1 (SUV39H1) from a compound library. CEBIT is simple and versatile, and is likely to become a powerful tool for drug discovery and basic biomedical research.
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