154Cisbio's HTRF cortisol assay performed on the PHERAstar FS

Jean-Luc Tardieu, Francois Degorce, Cisbio, 03/2007
  • 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11 beta-HSD1) is a key enzyme in everyday metabolism
  • Cisbio’s cortisol assay performed on the PHERAstar®FS to determine 11 beta-HSD1 activity
  • EC50 values for cortisol and IC50 values for common inhibitors determined

Introduction

Cortisol is a corticosteroid hormone present in many metabolic processes, inducing key enzymes of carbohydrate, fat and protein metabolism. Cortisol also acts as an anti-inflammatory and immuno-suppressor. One way to create this important hormone is by the reduction of cortisone by NADPH dependent 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 (11 beta- HSD1). This enzyme can be found in several tissues but  it is mostly present in liver and fat cells.

Recently Cisbio developed an assay to determine the activity of 11 beta-HSD1 using HTRF® technology. HTRF® (Homogeneous Time-Resolved Fluorescence) is based on TR-FRET (time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer), a combination of FRET chemistry and the use of fluorophores with long emission halflives (Europium, Eu3+). FRET uses two fluorophores, a donor and an acceptor. Excitation of the donor by an energy source (e.g. flash lamp or laser) triggers an energy transfer to the acceptor if they are within a given proximity to each other. The acceptor in turn emits light at a given wavelength.

Assay Principle

The cortisol assay is a monoclonal antibody based competitive assay (Figure 1). It is run in two steps. After the dehydrogenase reaction is finished (stimulation step), anti-cortisol cryptate (donor) and d2 labeled cortisol (acceptor) are added to the reaction mix. The anti-cortisol cryptate and the d2 labeled cortisol will bind to each other leading to a high HTRF® signal. Cortisol built during the enzymatic reaction will compete with d2-labeled cortisol for the binding to the cryptate conjugate, resulting in a loss in HTRF® signal  (detection step).

Fig. 1: Principle of Cisbio’s cortisol assay.

 

Materials & Methods

Instruments
BMG LABTECH’s PHERAstar FS, Offenburg, Germany HTRF® optical module (excitation: 337 nm, emission A: 665 nm and emission B: 620 nm), Offenburg, Germany Cisbio’s HTRF® Cortisol assay Bagnols, France.


Cortisol standard curve

10 μL of cortisol standards (serial dilution) and 5 μL of  each HTRF® conjugate (anti-cortisol cryptate and cortisol-d2) were dispensed into the wells of a black 384 small volume microplate from Greiner. The plates were measured using the HTRF® module after both two  hours and 16 hours of incubation. 


Biochemical assay 
Inhibitor dose response curves 2 μL of 11beta-HSD1 microsomal preparation (0.1 mg/mL) in Tris 20 mM EDTA 5 mM buffer (pH = 6), 6 μL of Tris 20 mM, EDTA 5 mM buffer (pH = 6) containing cortisone 266 nM and NADPH 333 μM and 2 μL of inhibitor (carbenoxolone  and glycyrrhetinic acid) at different concentrations in Tris 20 mM EDTA 5 mM buffer were dispensed into the wells. After 2 hours of incubation at 37°C, 5 μL of each HTRF® conjugate (anti-cortisol cryptate and cortisol- d2) were added. The plates were incubated for another 2 hours at room temperature before reading on the PHERAstar FS.

Data analysis
The signal is expressed in DeltaF in % (DF%).

Formula DF% Ratiowhere Ratio = (Signal at 665nm / Signal at 620nm) x 104 and pos.control = positive control and neg.control = negative control.


The ratio is automatically calculated by the PHERAstar
FS MARS data analysis software.

Results & Discussion

Figure 2 shows cortisol titration curves at different incubation times.

Fig. 2: Cortisol titration curves recorded on the PHERAstar FS after 2 hours and 16 hours incubation.

This data demonstrates that with increasing cortisol concentration the anti-cortisol cryptate is displaced proportionally resulting in a decreasing signal curve.

 Table 1:  EC50 values of cortisol standard curve after different incubation times.

 

Inhibitor

IC50 µM

Carbenoxolone

1.03

Glycyrrhetinic acid

1.17

 

Conclusion

The cortisol assay allows fast and efficient determination of cortisol in complex samples such as serum and whole cells. Screening for both active 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type 1 and its inhibitors is also simple and effective using this homogeneous assay.

The PHERAstar FS in combination with the optimized HTRF® optical module is the ideal tool to run HTRF® assays. The PHERAstar FS optical design provides  outstanding sensitivity and accuracy in fluorescence and luminescence assays; moreover, the dual simultaneous measurement minimizes the read time for assays.

Newsletter Sign-up