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Dive into the research topics where Jason Cassaday is active.

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Featured researches published by Jason Cassaday.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2004

Miniaturization of intracellular calcium functional assays to 1536-well plate format using a fluorometric imaging plate reader.

Peter Hodder; Rebecca Mull; Jason Cassaday; Kurtis Berry; Berta Strulovici

The measurement of intracellular calcium response transients in living mammalian cells is a popular functional assay for identification of agonists and antagonists to receptors or channels of pharmacological interest. In recent years, advances in fluorescence-based detection techniques and automation technologies have facilitated the adaptation of this assay to 384-well microplate format high-throughput screening (HTS) assays. However, the cost and time required performing the intracellular calcium HTS assays in the 384-well format can be prohibitive for HTS campaigns of greater than 1 × 106 wells. For these reasons, it is attractive to miniaturize intracellular calcium functional assays to the 1536-well microplate format, where assay volumes and plate throughput can be decreased by several fold. The focus of the research described in this article is the miniaturization of an intracellular calcium assay to 1536-well plate format. This was accomplished by modifying the hardware and software of a fluorometric imaging plate reader (FLIPR) to enable transfer of nanoliters of test compound directly to a 1536-well assay plate, and measure the resulting calcium response from all 1536 wells simultaneously. An intracellular calcium functional assay against the rat muscarinic acetylcholine receptor subtype 1 (rmAchR1) G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) was miniaturized and executed on this modified instrument. In experiments measuring the activity of known muscarinic receptor agonists and antagonists, the miniaturized FLIPR assay gave EC50 and IC50 values and rank order potency comparable to the 384-well format assays. Calculated Z′ factors for the miniaturized agonist and antagonist assays were, respectively, 0.56 ± 0.21 and 0.53 ± 0.22, which were slightly higher (Z′agonist = 0.55 ± 0.33) and lower (Z′antagonist = 0.70 ± 0.18) than the corresponding values in the 384-well assays. A mock agonist HTS campaign against the muscarinic receptor in miniaturized format was able to identify all wells spiked with the rmAchR1 agonist carbachol.


Analytical Biochemistry | 2003

Identification of metabotropic glutamate receptor antagonists using an automated high-throughput screening system

Peter Hodder; Jason Cassaday; Richard Peltier; Kurtis Berry; James Inglese; Bradley P. Feuston; Chris Culberson; Leo Bleicher; Nicholas D. P. Cosford; Chris Bayly; Carla Suto; Mark A. Varney; Berta Strulovici

Antagonists to the human metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 5a(mGluR(5a)) have been implicated as potential therapeutics for the treatment of a variety of nervous system disorders, including pain, anxiety, and Parkinsons disease. To discover novel antagonists to the mGluR(5a), a functional assay measuring agonist-induced intracellular calcium release was developed. The assay was used for the high-throughput screening of a large collection of compounds in single wells using a fully automated robotic platform. Primary high-throughput screening hits were subjected to a combination of data analysis and counterscreening assays to identify several compounds with both efficacy and selectivity for the metabotropic glutamate receptor target.


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2008

Miniaturization and HTS of a FRET-based membrane potential assay for K(ir) channel inhibitors.

Kelli Solly; Jason Cassaday; John P. Felix; Maria L. Garcia; Marc Ferrer; Berta Strulovici; Laszlo Kiss

The K(ir) family of potassium-selective ion channels is characterized by their inward (anomalous) rectifying current-voltage relationship. K(ir) channels are widely expressed in mammalian cells and through their role in regulation of the cell membrane potential have been implicated in diverse physiological functions. To enable the identification of novel K(ir) channel inhibitors, a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based membrane potential assay was developed using a Chinese hamster ovary cell line stably expressing a human K(ir) channel. The FRET-based assay incorporates the use of two dyes {N-(6-chloro-7-hydroxycoumarin-3-carbonyl)-dimyristoylphosphatidylethanolamine (CC2-DMPE) and bis(1,3-diethylthiobarbiturate)trimethine oxonol [DiSBAC(2)(3)]} to track changes in membrane potential, thus enabling all of the advantages of ratiometric readout: reduced inaccuracies arising from well-to-well variation in cell number, dye loading, signal intensities, and plate inconsistencies. The assay was miniaturized to a 1,536-well microtiter plate format and read on a fluorometric imaging plate reader (FLIPR(Tetra), Molecular Devices, Sunnyvale, CA). The assay was automated and utilized to perform a primary high-throughput screening campaign to identify novel inhibitors of the K(ir) channel.


Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2009

Identification of small-molecule modulators of mouse SVZ progenitor cell proliferation and differentiation through high-throughput screening.

Yaping Liu; Raul Lacson; Jason Cassaday; David A. Ross; Anthony Kreamer; Edward M. Hudak; Richard Peltier; Donna McLaren; Ignacio Munoz-Sanjuan; Francesca Santini; Berta Strulovici; Marc Ferrer

Adult mouse subventricular zone (SVZ) neural stem/progenitor cells are multipotent self-renewing cells that retain the capacity to generate the major cell types of the central nervous system in vitro and in vivo. The relative ease of expanding SVZ cells in culture as neurospheres makes them an ideal model for carrying out large-scale screening to identify compounds that regulate neural progenitor cell proliferation and differentiation. The authors have developed an adenosine triphosphate—based cell proliferation assay using adult SVZ cells to identify small molecules that activate or inhibit progenitor cell proliferation. This assay was miniaturized to a 1536-well format for high-throughput screening (HTS) of >1 million small-molecule compounds, and 325 and 581 compounds were confirmed as potential inducers of SVZ cell proliferation and differentiation, respectively. A number of these compounds were identified as having a selective proliferative and differentiation effect on SVZ cells versus mouse Neuro2a neuroblastoma cells. These compounds can potentially be useful pharmacological tools to modulate resident stem cells and neurogenesis in the adult brain. This study represents a novel application of primary somatic stem cells in the HTS of a large-scale compound library. (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2009:319-329)


ACS Chemical Biology | 2017

Iterative Focused Screening with Biological Fingerprints Identifies Selective Asc-1 Inhibitors Distinct from Traditional High Throughput Screening

Peter S. Kutchukian; Lee Warren; Brian C. Magliaro; Adam Amoss; Jason Cassaday; Gregory T. O’Donnell; Brian Squadroni; Paul Zuck; Danette Pascarella; J. Chris Culberson; Andrew John Cooke; Danielle M. Hurzy; Kelly-Ann S. Schlegel; Fiona J. Thomson; Eric N. Johnson; Victor N. Uebele; Jeffrey D. Hermes; Sophie Parmentier-Batteur; Michael Finley

N-methyl-d-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) mediate glutamatergic signaling that is critical to cognitive processes in the central nervous system, and NMDAR hypofunction is thought to contribute to cognitive impairment observed in both schizophrenia and Alzheimers disease. One approach to enhance the function of NMDAR is to increase the concentration of an NMDAR coagonist, such as glycine or d-serine, in the synaptic cleft. Inhibition of alanine-serine-cysteine transporter-1 (Asc-1), the primary transporter of d-serine, is attractive because the transporter is localized to neurons in brain regions critical to cognitive function, including the hippocampus and cortical layers III and IV, and is colocalized with d-serine and NMDARs. To identify novel Asc-1 inhibitors, two different screening approaches were performed with whole-cell amino acid uptake in heterologous cells stably expressing human Asc-1: (1) a high-throughput screen (HTS) of 3 M compounds measuring 35S l-cysteine uptake into cells attached to scintillation proximity assay beads in a 1536 well format and (2) an iterative focused screen (IFS) of a 45 000 compound diversity set using a 3H d-serine uptake assay with a liquid scintillation plate reader in a 384 well format. Critically important for both screening approaches was the implementation of counter screens to remove nonspecific inhibitors of radioactive amino acid uptake. Furthermore, a 15 000 compound expansion step incorporating both on- and off-target data into chemical and biological fingerprint-based models for selection of additional hits enabled the identification of novel Asc-1-selective chemical matter from the IFS that was not identified in the full-collection HTS.


Journal of Laboratory Automation | 2017

Development of a Platform to Enable Fully Automated Cross-Titration Experiments

Jason Cassaday; Michael F. Finley; Brian Squadroni; Sylvie Jezequel-Sur; Albert Rauch; Bharti Gajera; Victor N. Uebele; Jeffrey D. Hermes; Paul Zuck

In the triage of hits from a high-throughput screening campaign or during the optimization of a lead compound, it is relatively routine to test compounds at multiple concentrations to determine potency and maximal effect. Additional follow-up experiments, such as agonist shift, can be quite valuable in ascertaining compound mechanism of action (MOA). However, these experiments require cross-titration of a test compound with the activating ligand of the receptor requiring 100–200 data points, severely limiting the number tested in MOA assays in a screening triage. We describe a process to enhance the throughput of such cross-titration experiments through the integration of Hewlett Packard’s D300 digital dispenser onto one of our robotics platforms to enable on-the-fly cross-titration of compounds in a 1536-well plate format. The process handles all the compound management and data tracking, as well as the biological assay. The process relies heavily on in-house-built software and hardware, and uses our proprietary control software for the platform. Using this system, we were able to automate the cross-titration of compounds for both positive and negative allosteric modulators of two different G protein–coupled receptors (GPCRs) using two distinct assay detection formats, IP1 and Ca2+ detection, on nearly 100 compounds for each target.


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2010

Multiplexed Random Peptide Library and Phospho-Specific Antibodies Facilitate Human Polo-Like Kinase 1 Inhibitor Screen

Kenji Tanaka; Mitsunori Koresawa; Masato Iida; Kazuhiro Fukasawa; Erica Stec; Jason Cassaday; Peter Chase; Keith Rickert; Peter Hodder; Toshimitsu Takagi; Hideya Komatani

One of the challenges to develop time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) assay for serine/threonine (Ser/Thr) protein kinase is to select an optimal peptide substrate and a specific phosphor Ser/Thr antibody. This report describes a multiplexed random screen-based development of TR-FRET assay for ultra-high-throughput screening (uHTS) of small molecule inhibitors for a potent cancer drug target polo-like kinase 1 (Plk1). A screen of a diverse peptide library in a 384-well plate format identified several highly potent substrates that share the consensus motif for phosphorylation by Plk1. Their potencies were comparable to FKD peptide, a designed peptide substrate derived from well-described Plk1 substrate Cdc25C. A specific anti-phosphor Ser/Thr antibody p(S/T)F antibody that detects the phosphorylation of FKD peptide was screened out of 87 antibodies with time-resolved fluorometry technology in a 96-well plate format. Using FKD peptide and p(S/T)F antibody, we successfully developed a robust TR-FRET assay in 384-well plate format, and further miniaturized this assay to 1,536-well plate format to perform uHTS. We screened about 1.2 million compounds for Plk1 inhibitors using a Plk1 deletion mutant that only has the kinase domain and subsequently screened the same compound library using a full-length active-mutant Plk1. These uHTSs identified a number of hit compounds, and some of them had selectivity to either the deletion mutant or the full-length protein. Our results prove that a combination of random screen for substrate peptide and phospho-specific antibodies is very powerful strategy to develop TR-FRET assays for protein kinases.


SLAS DISCOVERY: Advancing Life Sciences R&D | 2017

High-Throughput Agonist Shift Assay Development for the Analysis of M1-Positive Allosteric Modulators

Michelle F. Homsher; Douglas C. Beshore; Jason Cassaday; Brian Squadroni; Elizabeth Mohammed; Michelle Hartnett; Stephen Day; Lei Ma; David Pechter; Michelle D. Smith; Fredrick Monsma; Paul Zuck; Michael Finley; Victor N. Uebele; Jeffrey D. Hermes

Agonist shift assays feature cross-titrations of allosteric modulators and orthosteric ligands. Information generated in agonist shift assays can include a modulator’s effect on the orthosteric agonist’s potency (alpha) and efficacy (beta), as well as direct agonist activity of the allosteric ligand (tauB) and the intrinsic binding affinity of the modulator to the unoccupied receptor (KB). Because of the heavy resource demand and complex data handling, these allosteric parameters are determined infrequently during the course of a drug discovery program and on a relatively small subset of compounds. Automation of agonist shift assays enables this data-rich analysis to evaluate a larger number of compounds, offering the potential to differentiate compound classes earlier and prospectively prioritize based on desired molecular pharmacology. A high-throughput calcium-imaging agonist shift assay was pursued to determine the allosteric parameters of over 1000 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) molecules for the human muscarinic acetylcholine receptor 1 (M1). Control compounds were run repeatedly to demonstrate internal consistency. Comparisons between potency measurements and the allosteric parameter results demonstrate that these different types of measurements do not necessarily correlate, highlighting the importance of fully characterizing and understanding the allosteric properties of leads.


Assay and Drug Development Technologies | 2008

A fluorescence-based thiol quantification assay for ultra-high-throughput screening for inhibitors of coenzyme A production.

Christine C. Chung; Kenji Ohwaki; Jonathan Schneeweis; Erica Stec; Jeffrey P. Varnerin; Paul N. Goudreau; Amy Chang; Jason Cassaday; Lihu Yang; Takeru Yamakawa; Oleg Kornienko; Peter Hodder; James Inglese; Marc Ferrer; Berta Strulovici; Jun Kusunoki; Michael R. Tota; Toshimitsu Takagi


Analytical Biochemistry | 2005

Miniaturization of absorbance assays using the fluorescent properties of white microplates

Paul Zuck; Gregory T. O’Donnell; Jason Cassaday; Peter Chase; Peter Hodder; Berta Strulovici; Marc Ferrer

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Marc Ferrer

National Institutes of Health

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Peter Hodder

Scripps Research Institute

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