Objective
Due to the growing
interest in membrane transporters as drug targets there is an increasing demand
for efficient, reliable and flexible systems for measuring transporter activity.
Solid Supported Membrane (SSM)-based electrophysiology has emerged as a
promising technique for the biophysical and pharmacological characterization of
electrogenic membrane proteins.
SSM-based
electrophysiology is a label-free measuring method which allows the use of
reconstituted protein or membrane samples from native tissues or cell culture. The
technique is highly sensitive and enables the resolution of low
turnover transport and even binding- events, which may not be detectable using conventional electrophysiological methods. The technique was invented in
the 90’s and since its introduction, more than 100 different proteins have
been tested. However, the method is still under-utilized primarily due to its limited
throughput. Here we present a novel high throughput instrument for SSM measurements
recording from 96 samples simultaneously. Data is presented showing several
different targets including SLC transporters, the neuronal glutamate
transporter, EAAT3, the organic cation transporter, OCT2, the Na+/Ca2+
exchanger, the Na+/K+-ATPas and the nicotinic
acetylcholine receptor (nAChR). Overall, we demonstrate that the SURFE2R
96SE is a novel, high throughput and flexible tool for transporter research and drug discovery.