A direct affinity screening-mass spectrometry assay, coupled to liquid chromatography, is presented as a tool for natural product drug discovery. Using the assay, fractionated extracts from a Caribbean gorgonian coral were shown to contain a new chemical entity (NCE) which binds to a mimic of the Gram positive bacterial cell wall (lysine-D-alanine-D-alanine). Conditions for observation of a specific noncovalent complex between the NCE and the target mimic using electrospray ionization-mass spectrometry were validated in a series of positive and negative control experiments, which featured flow injection analysis-based titrations. While the structural identity of the NCE could not be determined due to limited sample quantities, this work provides proof-of-principle for such an approach to potentially accelerate drug discovery from natural product sources.
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