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About Us  //  Staff  //  Anton Simeonov, Ph.D.
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Staff
Anton Simeonov, Ph.D.
Anton Simeonov, Ph.D. Photo
Group Leader
Bio-organic Chemistry and Assay Technologies
NIH Chemical Genomics Center
Education
Ph.D. University of Southern California, 1998
Postdoctral Fellow, Scripps Research Institute, 2000
Contact
E-mailasimeono@mail.nih.gov

Dr. Simeonov, the author and inventor on over 30 peer-reviewed scientific publications and patents, comes to the center with a truly diverse background, ranging from bio-organic chemistry and molecular biology to microfluidic device research and development. Prior to joining NCGC in November 2004, Dr. Simeonov was a senior scientist at Caliper Life Sciences, a leading developer of microfluidic technologies, where he was responsible for both basic research on novel assay chemistries and development of microfluidic products.

Dr. Simeonov is a Literature Editor of Assay and Drug Development Technologies, a bi-monthly journal published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. His current research interests include novel detection chemistries and techniques, assay miniaturization, and novel approaches to screening.

See below for background information prior to joining NIH.

Recent Publications:


Molecular Cancer Therapeutics Identification of phosphotyrosine mimetic inhibitors of Human Tyrosyl-DNA Phosphodiesterase I by a novel AlphaScreen high-throughput assay.
Marchand C, Lea W, Jadhav A, Dexheimer T, Austin CP, Inglese J, Pommier Y, Simeonov A.
Tyrosyl-DNA phosphodiesterase I (Tdp1) resolves topoisomerase I (Top1)-DNA adducts accumulated from natural DNA damage, as well as from the action of certain anticancer drugs. Tdp1 catalyzes the hydrolysis of the phosphodiester bond between the catalytic tyrosine residue of Top1 and the DNA 3’ phosphate. Only a limited number of weak inhibitors have been reported for Tdp1, and there is an unmet need to identify novel chemotypes through screening of chemical libraries. Herein we present an easily configured, highly-miniaturized, and robust Tdp1 assay utilizing the AlphaScreen technology. Uninhibited enzyme reaction is associated with low signal while inhibition leads to a gain of signal, making the present assay format especially attractive for automated large-collection high-throughput screening. We report the identification and initial characterization of four previously-unreported inhibitors of Tdp1. Among them, suramin, NF449 and methyl-3,4-dephostatin are phosphotyrosine mimetics that may act as Tdp1 substrate decoys. We also report a novel biochemical assay using the SCAN1 Tdp1 mutant to study the mechanism of action of methyl-3,4 dephostatin.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry Characterization of Chemical Libraries for Luciferase Inhibitory Activity.
Auld DS, Southall N, Jadhav A, Johnson RL, Diller D, Simeonov S, Austin CP, Inglese J.
To aid in the interpretation of HTS results derived from luciferase-based assays we used quantitative HTS (qHTS), an approach that defines the concentration-response behavior of each library sample, to profile the ATP-dependent luciferase from Photinus pyralis against >70,000 samples. We found approximately 3% of the library was active, containing only compounds with inhibitory concentration-responses of which 681 (0.9%) exhibited IC50s < 10 uM. Representative compounds were shown to inhibit purified P. pyralis as well as several commercial luciferase-based detection reagents but were found to be largely inactive against Renilla reniformis luciferase. Light attenuation by the samples was also examined and found to be more prominent in the blue-shifted bioluminescence produced by R. reniformas luciferase than with bioluminescence produced by P. pyralis luciferase. We describe the SAR of the luciferase inhibitors and discuss the use of this data in the interpretation of HTS results, and configuration of luciferase-based assays.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry Fluorescence Spectroscopic Profiling of Compound Libraries.
Simeonov S, Jadhav A, Thomas CJ, Wang Y, Huang R, Southall N, Shinn P, Smith J, Austin CP, Inglese J.
Chromo/fluorophoric properties often accompany the conjugated, aromatic and heterocyclic features of many of the scaffolds and impurities that make up library samples used for high throughput screening (HTS). These properties impart highly variable effects on assay outputs employing optical detection, thus complicating the interpretation of data and leading to false positives and negatives. Here, we report the comprehensive fluorescence profile of >70,000 samples across multiple spectral regions commonly utilized in HTS assays. The quantitative HTS (qHTS) paradigm was utilized to test each sample at seven or more concentration points over a 4-log concentration range in 1536-well format, with raw fluorescence response collected using a CCD-based imager. The resulting output was compared with fluorophore standards to compute a normalized fluorescence response (termed fluorophore-equivalent concentration, FEC) for each sample, concentration, and relevant spectral region. The greatest fraction of fluorescent compounds appeared in the UV-end of the light spectrum, where over 5% of library members matched or exceeded 10 nM FEC of 4-methylumbelliferone and AlexaFluor 350, while approximately 1.8% of the library matched or exceeded 100 nM FEC of these standards. Red-shifting the spectral window by as little as 100 nm was accompanied by a dramatic decrease in autofluorescence. Native compound fluorescence, scaffold overlap with known fluorophores, fluorescent impurities, novel fluorescent compounds, and the ability to discriminate generalities of fluorescent interferences and devise strategies to identify them are discussed.
ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies A 1,536-Well-Based Kinetic HTS Assay for Inhibitors of Schistosoma mansoni Thioredoxin Glutathione Reductase.
Lea WA, Jadhav A, Rai G, Sayed AA, Cass CL, Inglese J, Williams DL, Austin CP, Simeonov A.
Schistosomiasis is a major neglected tropical disease that currently affects over 200 million people and leads to over 200,000 annual deaths. Schistosoma mansoni parasites survive in humans in part because of a set of antioxidant enzymes that continuously degrade reactive oxygen species produced by the host. A principal component of this defense system has been recently identified as thioredoxin glutathione reductase (TGR), a parasite-specific enzyme that combines the functions of two human counterparts, glutathione reductase and thioredoxin reductase, and as such this enzyme presents an attractive new target for anti-schistosomiasis drug development. Herein, we present the development of a highly miniaturized and robust screening assay for TGR. The 5-mul final volume assay is based on the Ellman reagent [5,5'-dithiobis(2-nitrobenzoic acid) (DTNB)] and utilizes a high-speed absorbance kinetic read to minimize the effect of dust, absorbance interference, and meniscus variation. This assay is further applicable to the testing of other redox enzymes that utilize DTNB as a model substrate.
Nature Medicine Identification of oxadiazoles as new drug leads for the control of schistosomiasis
Sayed AA, Simeonov A, Thomas CJ, Inglese J, Austin CP, Williams DL.
Schistosomiasis is a tropical disease associated with high morbidity and mortality, currently affecting over 200 million people worldwide. Praziquantel is the only drug used to treat the disease, and with its increased use the probability of developing drug resistance has grown significantly. The Schistosoma parasites can survive for up to decades in the human host due in part to a unique set of antioxidant enzymes that continuously degrade the reactive oxygen species produced by the host's innate immune response. Two principal components of this defense system have been recently identified in S. mansoni as thioredoxin/glutathione reductase (TGR) and peroxiredoxin (Prx) and as such these enzymes present attractive new targets for anti-schistosomiasis drug development. Inhibition of TGR/Prx activity was screened in a dual-enzyme format with reducing equivalents being transferred from NADPH to glutathione via a TGR-catalyzed reaction and then to hydrogen peroxide via a Prx-catalyzed step. A fully automated quantitative high-throughput (qHTS) experiment was performed against a collection of 71,028 compounds tested as 7- to 15-point concentration series at 5 microL reaction volume in 1536-well plate format. In order to generate a robust data set and to minimize the effect of compound autofluorescence, apparent reaction rates derived from a kinetic read were utilized instead of end-point measurements. Actives identified from the screen, along with previously untested analogues, were subjected to confirmatory experiments using the screening assay and subsequently against the individual targets in secondary assays. Several novel active series were identified which inhibited TGR at a range of potencies, with IC(50)s ranging from micromolar to the assay response limit ( approximately 25 nM). This is, to our knowledge, the first report of a large-scale HTS to identify lead compounds for a helminthic disease, and provides a paradigm that can be used to jump-start development of novel therapeutics for other neglected tropical diseases.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences


Three classes of glucocerebrosidase inhibitors identified by quantitative high-throughput screening are chaperone leads for Gaucher disease
Zheng W, Padia J, Urban D, Jadhav A, Simeonov A, Goldin E, Auld DS, LaMarca ME, Inglese J, Austin CP, Sidransky E.
Gaucher disease is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disorder caused by mutations in the glucocerebrosidase gene. Missense mutations result in reduced enzyme activity that may be due to misfolding, raising the possibility of small-molecule chaperone correction of the defect. Screening large compound libraries by quantitative high-throughput screening (qHTS) provides comprehensive information on the potency, efficacy, and structure-activity relationships (SAR) of active compounds directly from the primary screen, facilitating identification of leads for medicinal chemistry optimization. We used qHTS to rapidly identify three structural series of potent, selective, nonsugar glucocerebrosidase inhibitors. The three structural classes had excellent potencies and efficacies and, importantly, high selectivity against closely related hydrolases. Preliminary SAR data were used to select compounds with high activity in both enzyme and cell-based assays. Compounds from two of these structural series increased N370S mutant glucocerebrosidase activity by 40-90% in patient cell lines and enhanced lysosomal colocalization, indicating chaperone activity. These small molecules have potential as leads for chaperone therapy for Gaucher disease, and this paradigm promises to accelerate the development of leads for other rare genetic disorders.
PLoS Neglected Tropical Diseases Quantitative High-Throughput Screen Identifies Inhibitors of the Schistosoma mansoni Redox Cascade.
Simeonov S, Jadhav A, Sayed AA, Wang Y, Nelson ME, Inglese J, Williams DL, Austin CP.
Schistosomiasis is a tropical disease associated with high morbidity and mortality, currently affecting over 200 million people worldwide. Praziquantel is the only drug used to treat the disease and with its increased use the probability of developing drug resistance has grown significantly. The Schistosoma parasites can survive for up to decades in the human host due in part to a unique set of antioxidant enzymes that continuously degrade the reactive oxygen species produced by the host's innate immune response. Two principle components of this defense system have been recently identified in S. mansoni as thioredoxin/glutathione reductase (TGR) and peroxiredoxin (Prx) and as such these enzymes present attractive new targets for anti-schistosomiasis drug development. Inhibition of TGR/Prx activity was screened in a dual-enzyme format with reducing equivalents being transferred from NADPH to a glutathione intermediate via a TGR-catalyzed reaction and then to hydrogen peroxide via Prx-catalyzed step. A fully-automated qHTS experiment (Inglese et al, PNAS, 103, 1147 (2006)) was performed against a collection of 71,028 compounds tested as 7- to 15-point concentration series at 5 ?L reaction volume in 1536-well plate format. In order to generate a robust data set and to minimize the effect of compound autofluorescence, apparent reaction rates derived from a kinetic read were utilized instead of end-point measurements. Actives identified from the screen, along with previously-untested analogues, were subjected to confirmatory experiments using the screening assay and subsequently against the individual targets in secondary assays. Several novel active series were identified which inhibited TGR at a range of potencies, with IC50s ranging from micromolar to the assay response limit (~25 nM). This is, to our knowledge, the first report of a large-scale HTS to identify lead compounds for a helminthic disease.
Combinatorial Chemistry & High Throughput Screening A High Throughput Fluorescence Polarization Assay for Inhibitors of the GoLoco Motif/G-alpha Interaction.
Kimple AJ, Yasgar A, Hughes M, Jadhav A, Willard FS, Muller RE, Austin CP, Inglese J, Ibeanu GC, Siderovski DP, Simeonov A.
The GoLoco motif is a short Galpha-binding polypeptide sequence. It is often found in proteins that regulate cell-surface receptor signaling, such as RGS12, as well as in proteins that regulate mitotic spindle orientation and force generation during cell division, such as GPSM2/LGN. Here, we describe a high throughput fluorescence polarization (FP) assay using fluorophore-labeled GoLoco motif peptides for identifying inhibitors of the GoLoco motif interaction with the G-protein alpha subunit Galpha (i1). The assay exhibits considerable stability over time and is tolerant to DMSO up to 5%. The Z'-factors for robustness of the GPSM2 and RGS12 GoLoco motif assays in a 96-well plate format were determined to be 0.81 and 0.84, respectively; the latter assay was run in a 384-well plate format and produced a Z'-factor of 0.80. To determine the screening factor window (Z-factor) of the RGS12 GoLoco motif screen using a small molecule library, the NCI Diversity Set was screened. The Z-factor was determined to be 0.66, suggesting that this FP assay would perform well when developed for 1,536-well format and scaled up to larger libraries. We then miniaturized to a 4 microL final volume a pair of FP assays utilizing fluorescein- (green) and rhodamine- (red) labeled RGS12 GoLoco motif peptides. In a fully-automated run, the Sigma-Aldrich LOPAC(1280) collection was screened three times with every library compound being tested over a range of concentrations following the quantitative high throughput screening (qHTS) paradigm; excellent assay performance was noted with average Z-factors of 0.84 and 0.66 for the green- and red-label assays, respectively.
Analytical Biochemistry Dual-fluorophore quantitative high-throughput screen for inhibitors of BRCT-phosphoprotein interaction.
Simeonov A, Yasgar A, Jadhav A, Lokesh GL, Klumpp C, Michael S, Inglese J, Austin CP, Natarajan A.
Finding specific small-molecule inhibitors of protein-protein interactions remains a significant challenge. Recently, attention has grown toward "hot spot" interactions where binding is dominated by a limited number of amino acid contacts, theoretically offering an increased opportunity for disruption by small molecules. Inhibitors of the interaction between BRCT (the C-terminal portion of BRCA1, a key tumor suppressor protein with various functions) and phosphorylated proteins (Abraxas/BACH1/CtIP), implicated in DNA damage response and repair pathways, should prove to be useful in studying BRCA1's role in cancer and in potentially sensitizing tumors to chemotherapeutic agents. We developed and miniaturized to a 1536-well format and 3ul final volume a pair of fluorescence polarization (FP) assays using fluorescein- and rhodamine-labeled pBACH1 fragment. To minimize the effect of fluorescence artifacts and to increase the overall robustness of the screen, the 75,552 compound library members all were assayed against both the fluorescein- and rhodamine-labeled probe-protein complexes in separate but interleaved reactions. In addition, every library compound was tested over a range of concentrations following the quantitative high-throughput screening (qHTS) paradigm. Analyses of the screening results led to the selection and subsequent confirmation of 16 compounds active in both assays. Faced with a traditionally difficult protein-protein interaction assay, by performing two-fluorophore qHTS, we were able to confidently select a number of actives for further studies.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry A Comprehensive Mechanistic Analysis of Hits from High-Throughput and Docking Screens Against Beta-Lactamase.
Babaoglu K, Simeonov A, Irwin, J, Nelson M, Feng BY, Thomas C, Cancian L, Costi MP, Maltby D, Jadhav A, Inglese J, Austin CP, Shoichet BK.
High-throughput screening (HTS) is widely used in drug discovery. Especially for screens of unbiased libraries, false positives can dominate "hit lists"; their origins are much debated. Here we determine the mechanism of every active hit from a screen of 70,563 unbiased molecules against beta-lactamase using quantitative HTS (qHTS). Of the 1,274 initial inhibitors, 95% were detergent-sensitive and were classified as aggregators. Among the 70 remaining were 25 potent, covalent-acting beta-lactams. Mass spectra, counter-screens, and crystallography identified 12 as promiscuous covalent inhibitors. The remaining 33 were either aggregators or irreproducible. No specific reversible inhibitors were found. We turned to molecular docking to prioritize molecules from the same library for testing at higher concentrations. Of 16 tested, 2 were modest inhibitors. Subsequent X-ray structures corresponded to the docking prediction. Analog synthesis improved affinity to 8 microM. These results suggest that it may be the physical behavior of organic molecules, not their reactivity, that accounts for most screening artifacts. Structure-based methods may prioritize weak-but-novel chemotypes in unbiased library screens.
ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies A robotic platform for quantitative high-throughput screening.
Michael S, Auld D, Klumpp C, Jadhav A, Zheng W, Thorne N, Austin CP, Inglese J, Simeonov A.
High-throughput screening (HTS) is increasingly being adopted in academic institutions, where the decoupling of screening and drug development has led to unique challenges, as well as novel uses of instrumentation, assay formulations, and software tools. Advances in technology have made automated unattended screening in the 1,536-well plate format broadly accessible and have further facilitated the exploration of new technologies and approaches to screening. A case in point is our recently developed quantitative HTS (qHTS) paradigm, which tests each library compound at multiple concentrations to construct concentration-response curves (CRCs) generating a comprehensive data set for each assay. The practical implementation of qHTS for cell-based and biochemical assays across libraries of > 100,000 compounds (e.g., between 700,000 and 2,000,000 sample wells tested) requires maximal efficiency and miniaturization and the ability to easily accommodate many different assay formats and screening protocols. Here, we describe the design and utilization of a fully integrated and automated screening system for qHTS at the National Institutes of Health's Chemical Genomics Center. We report system productivity, reliability, and flexibility, as well as modifications made to increase throughput, add additional capabilities, and address limitations. The combination of this system and qHTS has led to the generation of over 6 million CRCs from > 120 assays in the last 3 years and is a technology that can be widely implemented to increase efficiency of screening and lead generation.
Journal of the Association for Laboratory Automation Compound Management for Quantitative High-Throughput Screening.
Yasgar A, Shinn P, Jadhav A, Auld DS, Michael S, Zheng W, Austin CP, Inglese J, Simeonov A.
An efficient and versatile Compound Management operation is essential for the success of all downstream processes in high-throughput screening (HTS) and small molecule lead development. Staff, equipment, and processes need to be not only reliable, but remain flexible and prepared to incorporate paradigm changes. In the present report, we describe a system and associated processes which enable handling of compounds for both screening and follow-up purposes at the NIH Chemical Genomics Center (NCGC), a recently-established HTS and probe development center within the Molecular Libraries Initiative of the NIH Roadmap. Our screening process, termed quantitative HTS (qHTS), involves assaying the complete compound library, currently containing >200,000 members, at a series of dilutions to construct a full concentration-response profile. As such, Compound Management at the NCGC has been uniquely tasked to prepare, store, register, and track a vertically-developed plate dilution series (i.e., inter-plate titrations) in the 384-well format. These are compressed into a series of 1,536- well plates and are registered to track all subsequent plate storage. Here, we present details on the selection of equipment to enable automated, reliable and parallel compound manipulation in 384- and 1,536-well formats, protocols for preparation of inter-plate dilution series for qHTS, as well as qHTS-specific processes and issues.
ASSAY and Drug Development Technologies Evaluation of Micro-Parallel Liquid Chromatography (uPLC) as a Method for HTS-coupled Actives Verification.
Simeonov A, Yasgar A, Klumpp C, Zheng W, Shafqat N, Oppermann U, Austin CP, Inglese J.
The identification of biologically active compounds from HTS can involve considerable post-screening analysis to verify the nature of the sample activity. In this study we evaluated the performance of Micro Parallel Liquid Chromatography (uPLC) as a separation-based enzyme assay platform for follow-up of compound activities found in qHTS of two different targets, a hydrolase and an oxidoreductase. In an effort to couple secondary analysis to primary screening we explored the application of uPLC immediately after a primary screen. In a proof-of-concept experiment for screen-coupled actives verification, we identified, selected and consolidated the contents of "active" wells from a 1536-well format HTS experiment into a 384-well plate, and subsequently analyzed these samples by a 24-channel uPLC system. The method utilized 0.6% of the original 6 uL 1536-well assay for the analysis. The analysis revealed several nonbiological based "positive" samples. The main examples included "false" enzyme activators resulting from an increase in well-fluorescence due to fluorescent compound or impurity. The uPLC analysis also provided a verification of the activity of two activators of glucocerebrosidase. We discuss the benefits of uPLC and its limitations from the standpoint of ease of use and integration into a seamless post-screen workflow.
Nature Chemical Biology

High-throughput screening assays for the identification of chemical probes
Inglese J, Johnson RL, Simeonov A, Xia M, Zheng W, Austin CP, Auld DS.
High-throughput screening (HTS) assays enable the testing of large numbers of chemical substances for activity in diverse areas of biology. The biological responses measured in HTS assays span isolated biochemical systems containing purified receptors or enzymes to signal transduction pathways and complex networks functioning in cellular environments. This Review addresses factors that need to be considered when implementing assays for HTS and is aimed particularly at investigators new to this field. We discuss assay design strategies, the major detection technologies and examples of HTS assays for common target classes, cellular pathways and simple cellular phenotypes. We conclude with special considerations for configuring sensitive, robust, informative and economically feasible HTS assays.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry A high-throughput screen for aggregation-based inhibition in a large compound library.
Feng BY, Simeonov A, Jadhav A, Babaoglu K, Inglese J, Shoichet BK, Austin CP.
High-throughput screening (HTS) is the primary technique for new lead identification in drug discovery and chemical biology. Unfortunately, it is susceptible to false-positive hits. One common mechanism for such false-positives is the congregation of organic molecules into colloidal aggregates, which nonspecifically inhibit enzymes. To both evaluate the feasibility of large-scale identification of aggregate-based inhibition and quantify its prevalence among screening hits, we tested 70,563 molecules from the National Institutes of Health Chemical Genomics Center (NCGC) library for detergent-sensitive inhibition. Each molecule was screened in at least seven concentrations, such that dose-response curves were obtained for all molecules in the library. There were 1274 inhibitors identified in total, of which 1204 were unambiguously detergent-sensitive. We identified these as aggregate-based inhibitors. Thirty-one library molecules were independently purchased and retested in secondary low-throughput experiments; 29 of these were confirmed as either aggregators or nonaggregators, as appropriate. Finally, with the dose-response information collected for every compound, we could examine the correlation between aggregate-based inhibition and steep dose-response curves. Three key results emerge from this study: first, detergent-dependent identification of aggregate-based inhibition is feasible on the large scale. Second, 95% of the actives obtained in this screen are aggregate-based inhibitors. Third, aggregate-based inhibition is correlated with steep dose-response curves, although not absolutely. The results of this screen are being released publicly via the PubChem database.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences




Quantitative high-throughput screening: A titration-based approach that efficiently identifies biological activities in large chemical libraries
Inglese J, Auld DS, Jadhav A, Johnson RL, Simeonov A, Yasgar A, Zheng W, Austin CP.
High-throughput screening (HTS) of chemical compounds to identify modulators of molecular targets is a mainstay of pharmaceutical development. Increasingly, HTS is being used to identify chemical probes of gene, pathway, and cell functions, with the ultimate goal of comprehensively delineating relationships between chemical structures and biological activities. Achieving this goal will require methodologies that efficiently generate pharmacological data from the primary screen and reliably profile the range of biological activities associated with large chemical libraries. Traditional HTS, which tests compounds at a single concentration, is not suited to this task, because HTS is burdened by frequent false positives and false negatives and requires extensive follow-up testing. We have developed a paradigm, quantitative HTS (qHTS), tested with the enzyme pyruvate kinase, to generate concentration-response curves for >60,000 compounds in a single experiment. We show that this method is precise, refractory to variations in sample preparation, and identifies compounds with a wide range of activities. Concentration-response curves were classified to rapidly identify pyruvate kinase activators and inhibitors with a variety of potencies and efficacies and elucidate structure-activity relationships directly from the primary screen. Comparison of qHTS with traditional single-concentration HTS revealed a high prevalence of false negatives in the single-point screen. This study demonstrates the feasibility of qHTS for accurately profiling every compound in large chemical libraries (>10(5) compounds). qHTS produces rich data sets that can be immediately mined for reliable biological activities, thereby providing a platform for chemical genomics and accelerating the identification of leads for drug discovery.
Methods in Enzymology Fluorescent protein-based cellular assays analyzed by laser-scanning microplate cytometry in 1536-well plate format.
Auld DS, Johnson RL, Zhang YQ, Veith H, Jadhav A, Yasgar A, Simeonov A, Zheng W, Martinez ED, Westwick JK, Austin CP, Inglese J.
Microtiter plate readers have evolved from photomultiplier and charged-coupled device-based readers, where a population-averaged signal is detected from each well, to microscope-based imaging systems, where cellular characteristics from individual cells are measured. For these systems, speed and ease of data analysis are inversely proportional to the amount of data collected from each well. Microplate laser cytometry is a technology compatible with a 1536-well plate format and capable of population distribution analysis. Microplate cytometers such as the Acumen Explorer can monitor up to four fluorescent signals from single objects in microtiter plates with densities as high as 1536 wells. These instruments can measure changes in fluorescent protein expression, cell shape, or simple cellular redistribution events such as cytoplasmic to nuclear translocation. To develop high-throughput screening applications using laser-scanning microplate cytometry, we used green fluorescent protein- and yellow fluorescent protein-expressing cell lines designed to measure diverse biological functions such as nuclear translocation, epigenetic signaling, and G protein-coupled receptor activation. This chapter illustrates the application of microplate laser cytometry to these assays in a manner that is suitable for screening large compound collections in high throughput.
Background piror to NIH:
  • 1993-1998:Ph.D. in Bio-Organic Chemistry from the University of Southern California, Los Angeles, CA. Studied the mechanism of nitrogen fixation (Azotobacter vinelandii-based in vivo and in vitro systems). Laboratory of Prof. Charles E. McKenna.

    Expertise: single-step synthesis and characterization of small explosive homologues of nitrogen reduction intermediates; enzymology; bacterial growth and protein purification; anaerobic techniques.

    Selected publication:
    • Simeonov, A. M. and McKenna, C. E. A Convenient Phase-Transfer Method for Preparation of Pure cis-Dimethyldiazene (cis-Azomethane) in Aqueous Solution. Proton and Carbon NMR Studies of trans- and cis-Dimethyldiazene. J. Org. Chem. 60, 1897-9 (1995).
    • McKenna, C. E., Simeonov, A. M., Eran, H. and Bravo-Leerabhandh, M. Reduction of Cyclic and Acyclic Diazene Derivatives by A. vinelandii Nitrogenase: Diazirine and trans-Dimethyldiazene. Biochemistry 35, 4502-14 (1996).

  • 1998-2000:: Postdoctoral fellow at the Scripps Research Institute, LA Jolla, CA. Discovered blue fluorescent antibodies which represent a new paradigm in small molecule-protein interactions. Performed mechanistic studies of catalytic antibody functions. Laboratory of Prof. Richard Lerner and Kim Janda.

    Expertise: molecular biology; catalytic antibodies; protein purification; phage display; time-resolved and steady-state fluorescence techniques.

    Selected publication:
    • • Datta, A., Wentworth Jr., P., Shaw, J. P., Simeonov, A., and Janda, K. D. Catalytically Distinct Antibodies Prepared by the Reactive Immunization Versus Transition State Analog Hapten Manifolds. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 121, 10461-7 (1999).
    • Simeonov, A. M., et al. Blue-Fluorescent Antibodies. Science 290, 307-313 (2000).

  • 2000-2004:: Caliper Life Sciences, Mountain View, CA. Developed novel fluorescence-based assays for applications in high-throughput screening and clinical diagnostics.

    Expertise: bio-conjugate chemistry; assay development; microfluidic separation (chromatographic and electrophoretic) techniques; technology evaluation.

    Selected publication:
    • Simeonov, A. and Nikiforov, T., Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Genotyping Using Short, Fluorescently Labeled Locked Nucleic Acid (LNA) Probes and Fluorescence Polarization Detection. Nucleic Acids Res. 30, e91 (2002).
    • • Nikiforov, T. and Simeonov, A., Application of Fluorescence Polarization to Enzyme Assays and Single Nucleotide Polymorphism Genotyping: Some Recent Developments. Comb. Chem. High Throughput Screening 6, 201-12 (2003).