William J. Daily
Promega
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Featured researches published by William J. Daily.
Expert Opinion on Drug Metabolism & Toxicology | 2006
James J. Cali; Dongping Ma; Mary Sobol; Daniel J. Simpson; Susan Frackman; Troy Good; William J. Daily; David J. Liu
Luminogenic cytochrome P450 (CYP) assays couple CYP enzyme activity to firefly luciferase luminescence in a technology called P450-GloTM (Promega). Luminogenic substrates are used in assays of human CYP1A1, -1A2, -1B1, -2C8, -2C9, -2C19, -2D6, -2J2, -3A4, -3A7, -4A11, -4F3B, -4F12 and -19. The assays detect dose-dependent CYP inhibition by test compounds against recombinant CYP enzymes or liver microsomes. Induction or inhibition of CYP activities in cultured hepatocytes is measured in a nonlytic approach that leaves cells intact for additional analysis. Luminogenic CYP assays offer advantages of speed and safety over HPLC and radiochemical-based methods. Compared with fluorogenic methods the approach offers advantages of improved sensitivity and decreased interference between optical properties of test compound and CYP substrate. These homogenous assays are sensitive and robust tools for high-throughput CYP screening in early drug discovery.
Journal of Biomolecular Screening | 2005
Martha O'Brien; William J. Daily; P. Eric Hesselberth; Richard A Moravec; Michael Scurria; Dieter Klaubert; Robert F. Bulleit; Keith V. Wood
Using caspase-3 as a model, the authors have developed a strategy for highly sensitive, homogeneous protease assays suitable for high-throughput, automated applications. The assay uses peptide-conjugated aminoluciferin as the protease substrate and a firefly luciferase that has been molecularly evolved for increased stability. By combining the proluminescent caspase-3 substrate, Z-DEVD-aminoluciferin, with a stabilized luciferase in a homogeneous format, the authors developed an assay that is significantly faster and more sensitive than fluorescent caspase-3 assays. The assay has a single-step format, in which protease cleavage of the substrate and luciferase oxidation of the aminoluciferin occurs simultaneously. Because these processes are coupled, they rapidly achieve steady state to maintain stable luminescence for several hours. Maximum sensitivity is attained when this steady state occurs; consequently, this coupled-enzyme system results in a very rapid assay. The homogeneous format inherently removes trace contamination by free aminoluciferin, resulting in extremely low background and yielding exceptionally high signal-to-noise ratios and excellent Z′ factors. Another advantage of a luminescent format is that it avoids problems of cell autofluorescence or fluorescence interference that can be associated with synthetic chemical and natural product libraries. This bioluminescent, homogeneous format should be widely applicable to other protease assays.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2009
Richard A Moravec; Martha O'Brien; William J. Daily; Michael Scurria; Laurent Bernad; Terry Riss
A luminescent method to individually measure the chymotrypsin-like, trypsin-like, or caspase-like activities of the proteasome in cultured cells was developed. Each assay uses a specific luminogenic peptide substrate in a buffer optimized for cell permeabilization, proteasome activity, and luciferase activity. Luminescence is generated in a coupled-enzyme format in which proteasome cleavage of the peptide conjugated substrate generates aminoluciferin, which is a substrate for luciferase. The homogeneous method eliminates the need to prepare individual cell extracts as samples. Luminogenic proteasome substrates and buffer formulations enabled development of a single reagent addition method with adequate sensitivity for 96- and 384-well plate formats. Proteasome trypsin-like specificity was enhanced by incorporating a mixture of protease inhibitors that significantly reduce nonspecific serum and cellular backgrounds. The assays were used to determine EC(50) values for the specific proteasome inhibitors epoxomicin and bortezomib for each of the catalytic sites using a variety of cancer lines. These cell-based proteasome assays are direct, simple, and sensitive, making them ideal for high-throughput screening.
Biochemistry | 2008
Carolyn C. Woodroofe; John Shultz; Monika G. Wood; Jean Osterman; James J. Cali; William J. Daily; Poncho Meisenheimer; Dieter Klaubert
A set of 6-alkylated aminoluciferins are shown to be bioluminescent substrates for Ultra-Glo and QuantiLum luciferases. These studies demonstrate that both the engineered and wild-type firefly luciferases tolerate much greater steric bulk at the 6 position of luciferin than has been previously reported. The nature of the alkyl substituent strongly affects the strength of the bioluminescent signal, which varies widely based on size, shape, and charge. Several compounds were observed to generate more light than the corresponding unsubstituted 6-aminoluciferin. Determination of Michaelis-Menten constants for the substrates with Ultra-Glo indicated that the variation arises primarily from differences in V max, ranging from 1.33 x 10 (4) to 332 x 10 (4) relative light units, but in some cases K m (0.73-10.8 microM) also plays a role. Molecular modeling results suggest that interactions of the side chain with a hydrogen-bonding network at the base of the luciferin binding pocket may influence substrate-enzyme binding.
Analytical Biochemistry | 2007
Andrew L. Niles; Richard A Moravec; P. Eric Hesselberth; Michael Scurria; William J. Daily; Terry Riss
Archive | 2006
James J. Cali; William J. Daily; Erika Hawkins; Dieter Klaubert; Jianquan Liu; Poncho Meisenheimer; Michael Scurria; John Shultz; James Unch; Michael P. Valley; Keith V. Wood; Wenhui Zhou
Archive | 1998
David Aaron Schwartz; Brian Patrick Dwyer; William J. Daily; Kumar Srinivasan; Bob Dale Brown
Archive | 2003
James J. Cali; Dieter Klaubert; William J. Daily; Samuel Kin Sang Ho; Susan Frackman; Erika Hawkins; Keith V. Wood
Archive | 2003
Martha O'Brien; Keith V. Wood; Dieter Klaubert; William J. Daily
Archive | 1997
David Aaron Schwartz; Brian Patrick Dwyer; William J. Daily; Kumar Srinivasan; Bob Dale Brown