Screening in serum-derived medium reveals differential response to compounds targeting metabolism

Author:

Abbott Keene L.ORCID,Ali Ahmed,Casalena Dominick,Do Brian T.,Ferreira Raphael,Cheah Jaime H.,Soule Christian K.,Deik Amy,Kunchok Tenzin,Schmidt Daniel R.,Renner Steffen,Honeder Sophie E.,Wu Michelle,Chan Sze Ham,Tseyang Tenzin,Greaves Daniel,Hsu Peggy P.,Ng Christopher W.,Zhang Chelsea J.,Farsidjani Ali,Gramatikov Iva Monique T.,Matheson Nicholas J.,Lewis Caroline A.,Clish Clary B.,Rees Matthew G.,Roth Jennifer A.,Griner Lesley Mathews,Muir Alexander,Auld Douglas S.,Heiden Matthew G. VanderORCID

Abstract

SUMMARYA challenge for screening new candidate drugs to treat cancer is that efficacy in cell culture models is not always predictive of efficacy in patients. One limitation of standard cell culture is a reliance on non-physiological nutrient levels to propagate cells. Which nutrients are available can influence how cancer cells use metabolism to proliferate and impact sensitivity to some drugs, but a general assessment of how physiological nutrients affect cancer cell response to small molecule therapies is lacking. To enable screening of compounds to determine how the nutrient environment impacts drug efficacy, we developed a serum-derived culture medium that supports the proliferation of diverse cancer cell lines and is amenable to high-throughput screening. We used this system to screen several small molecule libraries and found that compounds targeting metabolic enzymes were enriched as having differential efficacy in standard compared to serum-derived medium. We exploited the differences in nutrient levels between each medium to understand why medium conditions affected the response of cells to some compounds, illustrating how this approach can be used to screen potential therapeutics and understand how their efficacy is modified by available nutrients.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Cited by 1 articles. 订阅此论文施引文献 订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献

1. Approaches to Study Tumor Metabolism in Mice;Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Medicine;2023-12

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