- Gassner, Nadine C;
- Tamble, Craig M;
- Bock, Jonathan E;
- Cotton, Naomi;
- White, Kimberly N;
- Tenney, Karen;
- St. Onge, Robert P;
- Proctor, Michael J;
- Giaever, Guri;
- Nislow, Corey;
- Davis, Ronald W;
- Crews, Phillip;
- Holman, Theodore R;
- Lokey, R Scott
The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae, a powerful model system for the study of basic eukaryotic cell biology, has been used increasingly as a screening tool for the identification of bioactive small molecules. We have developed a novel yeast toxicity screen that is easily automated and compatible with high-throughput screening robotics. The new screen is quantitative and allows inhibitory potencies to be determined, since the diffusion of the sample provides a concentration gradient and a corresponding toxicity halo. The efficacy of this new screen was illustrated by testing materials including 3104 compounds from the NCI libraries, 167 marine sponge crude extracts, and 149 crude marine-derived fungal extracts. There were 46 active compounds among the NCI set. One very active extract was selected for bioactivity-guided fractionation, resulting in the identification of crambescidin 800 as a potent antifungal agent.