A recently developed nanotechnology, the Integral Molecular lipoparticle, provides an essentially soluble cell-free system in which G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) in their native conformations are concentrated within virus-like particles. As a result, the lipoparticle provides a means to overcome 2 common obstacles to the development of homogeneous, nonradioactive GPCR ligand-binding assays: membrane protein solubilization and low receptor density. The work reported here describes the first application of this nanotechnology to a fluorescence polarization (FP) molecular binding assay format. The GPCR chosen for these studies was the well-studied chemokine receptor CXCR4 for which a peptide ligand (T-22) has been previously characterized. The EC 50 determined for the CXCR4-T-22 peptide interaction via FP with CXCR4 lipoparticles (15 nM) is consistent with the IC 50 determined for the unlabeled T-22 peptide via competitive binding (59 nM). (Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2008:424-429)
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