Novel CFTR Chloride Channel Activators Identified by Screening of Combinatorial Libraries Based on Flavone and Benzoquinolizinium Lead Compounds*,

Luis J. V. GaliettaDagger §, Mark F. Springsteel, Masahiro Eda, Edmund J. Niedzinski, Kolbot By, M. J. Haddadin, Mark J. Kurth, Michael H. Nantz, and A. S. VerkmanDagger ||

From the Dagger  Departments of Medicine and Physiology, Cardiovascular Research Institute, University of California, San Francisco, California, 94143-0521 and the  Department of Chemistry, University of California, Davis, California 95616-5295

Received for publication, March 1, 2001, and in revised form, March 21, 2001

    ABSTRACT
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

The flavonoid genistein and the benzo[c]quinolizinium MPB-07 have been shown to activate the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR), the protein that is defective in cystic fibrosis. Lead-based combinatorial and parallel synthesis yielded 223 flavonoid, quinolizinium, and related heterocyclic compounds. The compounds were screened for their ability to activate CFTR at 50 µM concentration by measurement of the kinetics of iodide influx in Fisher rat thyroid cells expressing wild-type or G551D CFTR together with the green fluorescent protein-based halide indicator YFP-H148Q. Duplicate screenings revealed that 204 compounds did not significantly affect CFTR function. Compounds of the 7,8-benzoflavone class, which are structurally intermediate between flavones and benzo[c]quinoliziniums, were effective CFTR activators with the most potent being 2-(4-pyridinium)benzo[h]4H-chromen-4-one bisulfate (UCCF-029). Compounds of the novel structural class of fused pyrazolo heterocycles were also strong CFTR activators with the most potent being 3-(3-butynyl)-5-methoxy-1-phenylpyrazole-4-carbaldehyde (UCCF-180). A CFTR inhibitor was also identified. The active compounds did not induce iodide influx in null cells deficient in CFTR. Short-circuit current measurements showed that the CFTR activators identified by screening induced strong anion currents in the transfected cell monolayers grown on porous supports. Compared with genistein, the most active compounds had up to 10 times greater potency in activating wild-type and/or G551D-CFTR. The activators had low cellular toxicity and did not elevate cellular cAMP concentration or inhibit phosphatase activity, suggesting that CFTR activation may involve a direct interaction. These results establish an efficient screening procedure to identify CFTR activators and inhibitors and have identified 7,8-benzoflavones and pyrazolo derivatives as novel classes of CFTR activators.

    INTRODUCTION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

The most common lethal genetic disease, cystic fibrosis (CF),1 is caused by mutations in the cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator protein CFTR (1). CFTR is a cAMP-regulated epithelial cell membrane Cl- channel that seems also to regulate the activities of other membrane proteins (2). Normally Cl--permeable epithelial cells in airways, pancreas, and other tissues become Cl--impermeable in CF, resulting in defective salt, water, and protein transport. Although the exact mechanism by which decreased CFTR Cl- permeability produces lung and pancreatic disease in CF remains unclear, it is generally believed that restoration of CFTR Cl- permeability will be clinically beneficial. An important goal in CF research is thus the identification of small molecule activators of CFTR.

Activators of CFTR chloride permeability can function by a number of direct and indirect mechanisms including increased cAMP production, inhibition of phosphodiesterase or phosphatase activities, or direct interactions with CFTR. Several chemical classes of activators have been identified including flavones/isoflavones (e.g. genistein, Refs. 3 and 4), benzo[c]quinoliziniums (MPB-07, Ref. 5), xanthines (isobutylmethylxanthine and 8-cyclopentyl-1,3-dipropylxanthine, Refs. 6-8), and benzimidazolones (NS004, Ref. 9). Flavones/isoflavones such as genistein and apigenin are thought to interact directly with the nucleotide binding fold regions of CFTR and not by the inhibition of tyrosine kinases (10, 11), although the exact mechanism has not been determined (12). There has been considerable interest in developing improved flavone-type CFTR activators because of their consistent and strong activation of wild-type and mutant CFTR in different cell types (13-15). The benzo[c]quinolizinium MBP-07 also seems to activate CFTR without elevating intracellular cAMP or ATP concentrations or affecting the activities of several known protein phosphatases (5).

The purpose of this study was to apply a high throughput screening assay for the discovery of novel CFTR activators. Preliminary combinatorial libraries were synthesized based on the flavone and benzo[c]quinolizinium structures. We chose these lead compounds because they are the most likely of the known activators to interact directly with CFTR, and they share a common structural motif amenable to the design of hybrid structures. In addition, as reported separately (4, 16-21), we have developed solution and solid-phase synthesis and purification methods for the efficient large scale production of test compounds. We report here the screening of purified test compounds for CFTR-activating potency by a cell-based halide transport assay that utilized fluorescent epithelial cells stably expressing wild-type or G551D CFTR together with the green fluorescent protein halide indicator YFP-H148Q. YFP-H148Q fluorescence is decreased by halides by a rapid shift in pKa upon halide binding to a site near its tri-amino acid chromophore (22). The screen revealed new classes of CFTR activators and a CFTR inhibitor, which were characterized further in terms of potency, CFTR specificity, activation mechanism, and the ability to induce transepithelial chloride currents in polarized epithelial cells.

    EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Generation of Combinatorial Compound Library-- (See Supplemental Material for a complete list of compounds and their structures.) Unless otherwise indicated, the flavonoids screened in the present study were prepared using the recently reported modification (23) of the conventional Baker-Venkataraman flavone synthesis (24, 25). The flavones UCCF-016-UCCF-21 were synthesized using a different modification of the Baker-Venkataraman flavone synthesis (26). All 2-aryl-4-quinolones and 2-aryl-quinoline-4-thiones were prepared using our previously described protocol (19). The flavone UCCF-045 was prepared as described (4), and the flavones UCCF-027, UCCF-028, and UCCF-034-UCCF-038 were prepared from 5-hydroxy-4'-iodoflavone via Suzuki coupling (27) using the following representative experimental procedure: 3-thiopheneboronic acid (1.5 eq, 15 mg), Pd(PPh3)4 (2.5 mol %, 1.7 mg, 0.00157 mmol), and K2CO3 (2.7 eq, 23.1 mg, 0.254 mmol) were added to a stirred solution of the 5-hydroxy-4'-iodoflavone (1.0 eq, 25 mg, 0.0628 mmol) in a mixture of dimethoxyethane (0.75 ml) and water (0.1 ml). The mixture was refluxed at 85 °C for 9 h. After cooling, the solvent was removed by rotary evaporation. The solid residue was dissolved in dichloromethane and extracted twice with 30 ml of water. The combined organic layers were washed with brine and dried using anhydrous sodium sulfate. After concentration, the solid residue was redissolved with a minimum quantity of hot ethyl acetate followed by the slow addition of hexane to allow crystallization. The solids were then filtered and washed with excess 10:1 hexane/ethyl acetate to obtain 10.5 mg of UCCF-037 (52% yield) as a light cream-colored solid. Compound identity and purity were confirmed by 1H and 13C NMR and thin layer chromatography. Quinolizinium salts were synthesized using the procedure described by Becq et al. (5). The (omega -hydroxy)alkylpyridinium and azacyanine analogs were prepared using our previously published procedures (16, 17). The fused pyrazolo heterocycles were synthesized as reported (18). Tetrazines and isoxazole heterocyles were prepared as described (20, 21). Compound homogeneity was verified by thin layer chromatography. A subset of compounds was examined by 1H and 13C NMR and found to be >90% pure.

Cell Culture and Transfection-- Fischer rat thyroid (FRT) cells expressing the human wild-type CFTR or CFTR-G551D were transfected with the plasmid pcDNA3.1 (Invitrogen) containing the cDNA encoding YFP-H148Q and selected in G418 (0.75 mg/ml). Clonal populations were obtained by repeated limiting dilution and cloning rings. Cells were cultured in Coon's modified F-12 medium supplemented with 5% fetal calf serum, 2 mM L-glutamine, 100 units/ml penicillin, and 100 µg/ml streptomycin.

Halide Transport Assay-- Cells were plated in 96-well black microplates (Corning Costar) at a density of 20,000 cells/well using a Labsystems multidrop apparatus. After 24-48 h, the cells were washed three times with phosphate-buffered saline using a Labsystems cell-wash apparatus and were incubated at 37 °C for 30 min. The residual volume of phosphate-buffered saline was 40 µl/well. The assay was performed in a FLUOstar Galaxy microplate reader (BMG LabTechnologies, Inc.) equipped with HQ500/20X (500 ± 10 nm) excitation and HQ535/30M (535 ± 15 nm) emission filters (Chroma Technology Corp.) and syringe pumps. YFP fluorescence in each well was monitored continuously for 100 s, and data were binned in 0.5-s intervals. At 5 s after the start of fluorescence recording, a syringe pump delivered 110 µl of a modified phosphate-buffered saline in which 137 mM NaI replaced NaCl to give an extracellular [I-] of 100 mM. After an additional 15 s, a second syringe pump delivered 50 µl of a 100 mM I--containing solution including specified concentrations of forskolin. The assays were performed at 37 °C.

Cell Toxicity, Intracellular cAMP, and Phosphatase Assays-- The cell toxicity of all synthesized compounds was assessed using the sulforhodamine incorporation method (28). Briefly, cells grown in 96-well plates were exposed for 24 h to a 50 µM concentration of each compound in the culture medium. Cells were then fixed for 1 h at 4 °C by adding 10 µl of 50% trichloroacetic acid/100 µl of culture medium and subsequently washed five times with water. The cells were stained with 100 µl of 0.4% sulforhodamine B in 1% acetic acid for 30 min at room temperature. Excess dye was removed by washing with 1% acetic acid. After the removal of residual solution and drying, the bound dye was solubilized in 100 µl of 10 mM unbuffered Tris for measurement of solution absorbance at 564 nm.

cAMP activity was measured using the BIOTRAK enzymatic immunoassay (Amersham Pharmacia Biotech). FRT cells expressing CFTR were cultured in 96-well plates. After washing and incubation in phosphate-buffered saline, the cells were incubated for 10 min with specified concentrations of forskolin, UCCF-029, or UCCF-180 and then lysed with the reagent provided by the kit. The lysates were assayed for cAMP content in triplicate according to manufacturer's instructions. Phosphatase activity was determined with a nonradioactive assay kit (Promega). Briefly, 17 Petri dishes containing CFTR-expressing FRT cells were washed and scraped using ice-cold phosphate-free buffer. After centrifugation, the cells were resuspended in 3 ml of a buffer containing 250 mM imidazole (pH 7.2), 1 mM EGTA, 1 mM MgCl2, 0.1% beta -mercaptoethanol, and a mixture of protease inhibitors (Roche). Cells were lysed with 30 strokes of a Dounce homogenizer, and the supernatant was recovered after centrifugation at 14,000 rpm for 15 min and frozen. Phosphatase activity was determined by incubating the homogenate (5 µg of protein) with the phosphorylated peptide substrate (provided in the kit) for 30 min at 30 °C, which was shown to be in the linear region. The reaction was terminated by the addition of the dye/additive mixture, and absorbance was measured at 620 nm.

Short-circuit Current Measurements-- FRT cells stably expressing human wild-type or G551D CFTR were cultured on Snapwell inserts (Costar) at a density of 500,000 cells/insert. After 8-15 days, when the transepithelial electrical resistance was 3-4 kilo-ohm/cm2, the inserts were mounted in an Ussing chamber system (Vertical diffusion chamber, Costar). Apical and basolateral hemichambers were filled with 5 ml of a solution containing 75 mM NaCl and 75 mM sodium gluconate (apical solution) and 150 mM NaCl (basolateral solution) (both pH 7.3). The chambers were connected to a DVC-1000 voltage clamp (World Precision Instruments) via silver/AgCl electrodes and 1 M KCl agar bridges. The electrode offset potential and the fluid resistance were corrected using an insert not containing cells. During the experiments, the transepithelial potential was clamped at 0 mV, and the short-circuit current was recorded by a 16-bit analog-to-digital converter (PC-516 DAQ board, National Instruments) using a collection/display program written using LabView 6I software (National Instruments). At the beginning of the experiment, the basolateral membrane was permeabilized by adding 250 µg/ml amphotericin B. Permeabilization (developing over ~30 min) was monitored by changes in transepithelial resistance. Forskolin was added at indicated concentrations in both hemichambers, and test compounds were added on the apical side only. In these measurements the basolateral membrane was permeabilized with amphotericin B, and a Cl- gradient was established to measure CFTR-mediated Cl- transport directly as reported (29, 30). This maneuver eliminates possible contributions of basolateral membrane channels. A Cl- gradient was established to generate a driving force for basolateral to apical Cl- transport at zero transepithelial potential difference.

    RESULTS
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

Fig. 1 shows core structures of the classes of compounds that were synthesized. The compounds are referred to as UCCF-01 (University of California-cystic fibrosis) through UCCF-223 and have been grouped in the following structural classes: flavonoids, quinoliziniums, pyridiniums, azacyanines, isoxazoles, and fused pyrazole heterocycles. Fig. 1 (bottom row) shows the structures of the reference compound genistein and two CFTR activators that were investigated in detail.


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Fig. 1.   Structures of the compounds screened for CFTR activation. The core structures of indicated compound classes are shown. The bottom row shows the structures of genistein and two novel CFTR activators. See Supplemental Material for the structures of all compounds synthesized and screened.

Each compound was screened individually for its potency as a CFTR activator/inhibitor. Fig. 2A shows the fluorescence assay. FRT cells coexpressing human wild-type CFTR or G551D CFTR (which causes CF) and YFP-H148Q were cultured on 96-well plates for the monitoring of YFP fluorescence in a plate reader. The FRT cells and assay conditions were chosen to minimize CFTR-independent halide transport and basal (prior to cAMP simulation) CFTR halide transport. After recording baseline fluorescence, an osmotically matched I--containing solution was added to the Cl--containing solution bathing the cells to establish a 100 mM inwardly directed I- gradient (Fig. 2A, left). There was little I- influx (decrease in fluorescence) prior to the activation of wild-type CFTR under the experimental conditions used here. Subsequent activation by forskolin resulted in dose-dependent I- influx and decreased cell fluorescence. Neither activation of G551D CFTR nor of null cells that do not express CFTR was observed under these conditions (data not shown). As depicted schematically (Fig. 2A, middle and right panels), a test compound could (a) have no effect, (b) activate CFTR directly (prior to forskolin addition), (c) activate CFTR in synergy with forskolin (after forskolin addition), or (d) inhibit CFTR.


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Fig. 2.   Screening for activators of wild-type and G551D CFTR. A, left panel, representative fluorescence time course curves showing the activation of wild-type CFTR in FRT cells expressing YFP-H148Q. Middle panel, for wild-type CFTR, the addition of a test compound can have no effect (heavy line), can inhibit forskolin-stimulated I- transport, or can activate forskolin-independent or -dependent I- transport. Right panel, for G551D CFTR, the addition of a test compound can have no effect (heavy line) or can activate forskolin-independent or -dependent I- transport. B, duplicate screening of the 223-compound library on FRT cells expressing wild-type CFTR. Assays were done as in A (see "Experimental Procedures"). Inset, representative fluorescence data for indicated compounds. C, a screening of FRT cells expressing G551D CFTR showing I- transport after the addition of 5 µM forskolin. Inset, representative fluorescence data for indicated compounds.

In the initial screen, test compounds were added to the cell bathing solution at 50 µM concentration just prior to the assay. For screening of the cells expressing wild-type CFTR, a submaximal concentration of forskolin (250 nM) was added during the assay to probe for synergy with the test compounds with cAMP activation. Fig. 2B summarizes the data from duplicate screening of the compound library. The ordinate is the maximum normalized slope of the fluorescence time course, representing I- influx (in mM/s) measured after I- addition. Although most of the compounds were inactive, several compounds activated CFTR strongly in the absence of forskolin, as seen by the prompt fluorescence decrease upon I- addition. Fig. 2B (inset) provides representative original curves from the screen showing activation of wild-type CFTR by the compounds UCCF-027, UCCF-029, UCCF-031, and UCCF-180. The novel activators included compounds of the novel 7,8-benzoflavone and fused pyrazole heterocycle classes. Interestingly, compound UCCF-019, which contains a t-butyl substituent, inhibited forskolin-stimulated CFTR activity. None of the compounds synergized forskolin-stimulated CFTR activity without increasing CFTR activity in the absence of forskolin. Several of the novel activating compounds were characterized further (see below).

A full screen was also carried out in FRT cells expressing G551D CFTR. Halide transport by G551D CFTR is not increased by cAMP elevation alone. For screening, cells were treated with 50 µM of each test compound, and then a high forskolin concentration (5 µM) was added during the assay to identify compounds that potentiated the effect of cAMP elevation. With the exception of UCCF-029, none of the 222 remaining compounds activated CFTR prior to forskolin addition. Fig. 2C summarizes the maximum normalized fluorescence slope, representing I- influx after forskolin addition. Many of the same compounds that activated wild-type CFTR also activated G551D CFTR, although relative activating potencies differed, and a few compounds activated preferentially wild-type CFTR (e.g. UCCF-180) or G551D CFTR (e.g. UCCF-023 and UCCF-030). Representative original fluorescence curves are shown in Fig. 2C (inset).

Further analysis was done on compounds with apparent CFTR-activating potency. Except for compound UCCF-152, repeat assays of the putative CFTR activators confirmed the results of the original screens. Additional screening using a different cell line (Chinese hamster ovary cells expressing CFTR and YFP-H148Q) confirmed the results in FRT cells (data not shown). None of the putative CFTR activators induced halide flux in cells not expressing CFTR. Preliminary dose-response data (concentration range 1-50 µM) were generated to identify those compounds warranting further investigation. Fig. 3A depicts a dose-dependence for the activation of wild-type CFTR by UCCF-029 and UCCF-180, showing substantially better potency than the reference compound genistein. Fig. 3B shows a similar comparison for the activation of G551D CFTR. Genistein was active at >50 µM, whereas UCCF-023, UCCF-027, UCCF-028, and UCCF-030 induced significant iodide influx at 6.25-12.5 µM.


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Fig. 3.   Dose-response analysis of CFTR activators. Representative fluorescence curves are shown for FRT cells expressing wild-type CFTR (A) and G551D CFTR (B). Compounds and concentrations are indicated. Right panels, concentration dependence of CFTR activation. Averaged slopes (S.E., n = 3-6 sets of experiments) are shown.

Electrophysiological measurements of Cl- current were done to confirm CFTR activation and to compare activation potencies. Short-circuit current was measured in polarized monolayers of FRT cells expressing wild-type or G551D CFTR. Fig. 4A shows short-circuit current in response to the activation of wild-type CFTR by genistein versus UCCF-029 and UCCF-180. The induced Cl- current was inhibited by the CFTR blocker diphenylamine-2-carboxylate. The effect of forskolin is shown for comparison. UCCF-029, the most potent activator of wild-type CFTR in the initial screening, induced a strong Cl- current at 5-10 µM with a significant effect at 1-2 µM, whereas genistein was not effective at the same concentrations. At 5 and 10 µM concentrations, UCCF-029 was 10 and 16 times more effective than genistein in increasing short-circuit current (in µA/cm2, n = 5; S.E. = 61 ± 16 versus 5.7 ± 3 [5 µM]; 115 ± 28 versus 7 ± 2 [10 µM]). As found in the plate-reader assay, UCCF-180 induced significant short-circuit current at concentrations lower than those required for genistein. Similar experiments showed no increase in short-circuit current in nontransfected FRT cells, supporting the conclusion that these compounds activate CFTR. The CFTR inhibitor UCCF-019 identified in the screening was confirmed by short-circuit current analysis (data not shown). We found that compounds of the benzoquinolizinium class including the lead compound MPB-07 (freshly synthesized and dissolved) were not effective in activating CFTR in the plate-reader assay or by short-circuit current analysis. It is unclear whether cell-type differences or other factors account for the absence of MPB-07 activation of CFTR in our experiments.


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Fig. 4.   Short-circuit current (Isc) measurements FRT cells expressing wild-type CFTR (A) and G551D CFTR (B). Cells were permeabilized on the basolateral surface as described under "Experimental Procedures." Where present, forskolin was applied to the apical and basolateral surfaces and other compounds were applied to the apical surface only. DPC, diphenylamine-2-carboxylate.

Fig. 4B shows short-circuit current analysis of G551D CFTR activation by genistein versus UCCF-030. UCCF-030 was remarkably more potent than genistein, which is in agreement with the fluorescence plate-reader data. Interestingly, the activator of wild-type CFTR, UCCF-180, was ineffective in activating G551D CFTR. The compounds UCCF-023, UCCF-027, and UCCF-028 were also effective in inducing short-circuit current in cells expressing G551D CFTR (data not shown).

All compounds were screened for cell toxicity using a dihydrorhodamine accumulation assay. At 50 µM concentrations for 24 h, the reference compound genistein caused ~20% growth inhibition. All compounds with activating potency on wild-type and/or G551D CFTR were nontoxic (cell growth >90% of control) except for UCCF-027, which was similar to genistein. To investigate the CFTR-activating mechanism, the CFTR activators were tested for their ability to elevate intracellular cAMP concentration and inhibit cell phosphatase activity. Using an enzymatic immunoassay, no significant elevation in cAMP concentration was found for 10-min incubations with the activators UCCF-029 at 5 µM and UCCF-180 at 25 µM (Fig. 5A), concentrations that induced short-circuit currents of 61 ± 16 and 53 ± 12 µA/cm2, respectively. These values were significantly higher than that induced by 1 µM forskolin (19 ± 4 µA/cm2), which produced a substantial elevation in intracellular cAMP concentration. Fig. 5B summarizes the results of an assay of cell phosphatase activity, showing strong inhibition by okadaic acid and NaF. Total cell phosphatase activity was not significantly inhibited at concentrations of UCCF-029 and UCCF-180 that markedly stimulated CFTR. Together the data suggest that the CFTR-activation mechanism may involve direct compound-CFTR interactions.


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Fig. 5.   cAMP and phosphatase assays. A, cAMP in lysates of FRT cells after incubation with indicated concentrations of forskolin, UCCF-029, or UCCF-180 (*, p < 0.01). B, phosphatase activity in cell homogenates. Okadaic acid (50 nM) and NaF (50 mM) significantly reduced phosphatase activity (*, p < 0.01).


    DISCUSSION
TOP
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

This study was designed to identify new CFTR activators that interact directly with CFTR. Structure-based drug design is not yet possible for CFTR because of the very limited knowledge about CFTR tertiary structure. We chose to generate a combinatorial compound library based on two lead compounds, flavones and benzo[c]quinoliziniums, which are believed to activate CFTR Cl- conductance by direct interaction with the CFTR molecule. A secondary purpose of this study was to establish the utility of a new cell-based screening assay to efficiently quantify the activity of putative CFTR activators and inhibitors. A number of technical challenges were encountered including the synthetic organic chemistry, cell line development, and transport assay optimization.

Several novel CFTR activators were identified as well as a CFTR inhibitor. Interestingly, the structures of a potent class of compounds, the 7,8-benzoflavones (e.g. UCCF-027 and UCCF-029), contained features of both flavones and benzo[c]quinoliziniums. Activators of the novel class of fused pyrazole heterocycles were also identified. Although these compounds (such as UCCF-180) were less potent than the most potent benzoflavones, they represent a new class of CFTR activators. The CFTR activators did not induce Cl- currents in null cells, and short-circuit current analysis showed that they had activating potencies for wild-type and G551D CFTR that were substantially better than the existing lead compounds. The CFTR activators were nontoxic in the cell culture model and activated CFTR without measurable elevation in intracellular cAMP concentration or inhibition of total cell phosphatase activity. Single channel measurements will be required to establish whether these compounds interact directly with CFTR.

Interestingly, the order of activating potencies of the CFTR activators on wild-type versus G551D CFTR was different. For example, UCCF-029 was the most potent compound in activating wild-type CFTR but had less effect on G551D CFTR. In contrast, UCCF-023, UCCF-028, and UCCF-030, which were substantially less potent than UCCF-029 in activating wild-type CFTR, were very potent in activating G551D CFTR in synergy with forskolin. As additional structural information on CFTR becomes available, the compounds with differential potencies discovered here may be useful in identifying critical structural motifs important for CFTR activation. For the most common CFTR mutant causing cystic fibrosis in humans, Delta F508 CFTR, the activators identified here may be useful in synergy with compounds that correct the intracellular processing defect of this mutant.

Although our main aim was to identify CFTR activators, the assay permits the identification of CFTR inhibitors. It was found that the flavone UCCF-019 significantly reduced CFTR-mediated halide transport. Further studies are needed to determine whether the reduced halide transport involves direct CFTR binding or inhibition of the CFTR-activating pathway. CFTR inhibitors are important in basic cystic fibrosis research in terms of CFTR functional studies and may be useful clinically in the treatment of secretory diarrheas such as cholera.

The fluorescence assay reported here should be useful in high throughput screening of other lead-based compound libraries as well as random combinatorial libraries. The assay permits the rapid quantitative measurement of cAMP-independent and -dependent halide permeability using a commercial automated fluorescence plate reader. The goal in identifying CFTR activators is to discover clinically useful drugs that will activate mutant CFTR molecules in cystic fibrosis. The underlying assumption in CF drug discovery is that activation of CFTR in cell culture models is a good surrogate marker for in vivo efficacy in improving clinical outcome in cystic fibrosis patients. Although this assumption is supported by a considerable body of data on the biology and function of CFTR, rigorous validation will require animal and human testing of potent nontoxic CFTR activators.

    ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

We thank Dr. Horst Fischer for helpful discussions regarding flavone targets.

    FOOTNOTES

* This work was supported by a program grant from the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation for CF drug discovery and National Institutes of Health Grants DK43840, HL60288, HL59198, and DK35124.The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. The article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.

The on-line version of this article (available at http://www.jbc.org) contains an appendix.

§ Present address: Instituto Gaslini, Genoa, Italy.

|| Cardiovascular Research Institute, 1246 Health Sciences E. Tower, University of California, San Francisco, CA 94143-0521. Tel.: 415-476-8530; Fax: 415-665-3847; E-mail: verkman@itsa.ucsf.edu.

Published, JBC Papers in Press, March 21, 2001, DOI 10.1074/jbc.M101892200

    ABBREVIATIONS

The abbreviations used are: CF, cystic fibrosis; CFTR, CF transmembrane conductance regulator; YFP, yellow fluorescent protein; FRT, Fischer rat thyroid.

    REFERENCES
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ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
REFERENCES

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