SLAS Technology (Oct 2024)

A duplexed high-throughput mass spectrometry assay for bifunctional POLB polymerase and lyase activity

  • Zachary A. Gurard-Levin,
  • Brian McMillan,
  • Douglas A. Whittington,
  • Brian Doyon,
  • Michael D. Scholle,
  • Jacques Ermolieff,
  • Madhavi Bandi,
  • Mu-Sen Liu,
  • Alvaro Amor,
  • William D. Mallender

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 29, no. 5
p. 100173

Abstract

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Polymerase β (POLB), with dual functionality as a lyase and polymerase, plays a critical role in the base excision repair (BER) pathway to maintain genomic stability. POLB knockout and rescue studies in BRCA1/2-mutant cancer cell lines revealed that inhibition of lyase and polymerase activity is required for the synthetic lethal interaction observed with PARP inhibitors, highlighting POLB as a valuable therapeutic target. Traditional biochemical assays to screen for enzyme inhibitors focus on a single substrate to product relationship and limit the comprehensive analysis of enzymes such as POLB that utilize multiple substrates or catalyze a multi-step reaction. This report describes the first high-throughput mass spectrometry-based screen to measure the two distinct biochemical activities of POLB in a single assay using a duplexed self-assembled monolayer desorption ionization (SAMDI) mass spectrometry methodology. A multiplexed assay for POLB dual enzymatic activities was developed optimizing for kinetically balanced conditions and a collection of 200,000 diverse small molecules was screened in the duplexed format. Small molecule modulators identified in the screen were confirmed in a traditional fluorescence-based polymerase strand-displacement assay and an orthogonal label-free binding assay using SAMDI affinity selection mass spectrometry (ASMS). This work demonstrates the flexibility of high-throughput mass spectrometry approaches in drug discovery and highlights a novel application of SAMDI technology that opens new avenues for multiplexed high-throughput screening.

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