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1.
A novel sensor chip for use in surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensors has been developed to capture vesicles which may contain membrane-bound receptors. Sulforhodamine-containing vesicles were shown by fluorescence microscopy to be immobilized intact on the sensor chip. Binding of cholera toxin to captured vesicles containing ganglioside GM(1) was demonstrated using SPR, and the derived kinetic and affinity constants were similar to literature values. Biotinylated vesicles captured on the sensor chip were used to bind streptavidin and then biotinylated ss-DNA. The hybridization of complementary ss-DNA to the immobilized ss-DNA was then analyzed using SPR. The values obtained were similar to those obtained for an identical interaction analyzed using a commercially available streptavidin-containing sensor chip. Binding of vancomycin-group antibiotics to captured vesicles containing a bacterial cell wall mucopeptide analogue was demonstrated. No binding of the bacterial endotoxin Cry1A(c) to captured vesicles containing its cell surface receptor could be demonstrated.  相似文献   

2.
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) detection requires no labeling of antigen or antibodies and allows quantification of two or more interacting molecular species. The automated SPR instrument used here consists of an optical detection unit, an integrated liquid handling unit, and an autosampler. A first molecule is immobilized to the dextran modified surface of the sensor chip. By sequential introduction, the stepwise formation of multimolecular complexes can then be monitored. A two-site binding assay which allows characterization of MoAb epitope specificities is described. A polyclonal rabbit anti-mouse IgG1 (RAMG1) immobilized to the dextran surface is used to capture the first MoAb from unprocessed hybridoma culture supernatants. After introducing the antigen, the ability of a second MoAb to bind to the antigen is tested. The analysis cycle which is fully automated can be performed more than 100 times using the same RAMG1 surface. Since the detection principle allows monitoring of each reactant in the consecutive formation of a multimolecular complex, multi-site binding experiments can be performed. Five MoAbs recognizing different epitopes on an antigen were shown to bind sequentially, forming a hexamolecular complex. MoAbs were further characterized by inhibition analysis using synthetic peptides derived from the primary structure of their antigen. As a model system MoAbs against recombinant HIV-1 core protein p24 were used in all experiments.  相似文献   

3.
A method has been developed for measurement of antibody affinity and cross-reactivity by surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy using the EK-coil heterodimeric coiled-coil peptide capture system. This system allows for reversible capture of synthetic peptide ligands on a biosensor chip surface, with the advantage that multiple antibody-antigen interactions can be analyzed using a single biosensor chip. This method has proven useful in the development of a synthetic peptide anti-Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PA) vaccine. Synthetic peptide ligands corresponding to the receptor binding domains of pilin from four strains of PA were conjugated to the E-coil strand of the heterodimeric coiled-coil domain and individually captured on the biosensor chip through dimerization with the immobilized K-coil strand. Polyclonal rabbit IgG raised against pilin epitopes was injected over the sensor chip surface for kinetic analysis of the antigen-antibody interaction. The kinetic rate constants, k(on) and k(off), and equilibrium association and dissociation constants, KA and KD, were calculated. Antibody affinities ranged from 1.14 x 10(-9) to 1.60 x 10(-5) M. The results suggest that the carrier protein and adjuvant used during immunization make a dramatic difference in antibody affinity and cross-reactivity. Antibodies raised against the PA strain K pilin epitope conjugated to keyhole limpet haemocyanin using Freund's adjuvant system were more broadly cross-reactive than antibodies raised against the same epitope conjugated to tetanus toxoid using Adjuvax adjuvant. The method described here is useful for detailed characterization of the interaction of polyclonal antibodies with a panel of synthetic peptide ligands with the objective of obtaining high affinity and cross-reactive antibodies in vaccine development.  相似文献   

4.
A fractal analysis is used to analyze the influence of: (a) electrostatic interactions on binding and dissociation rate coefficients for antibodies HH8, HH10, and HH26 in solution to hen egg-white lysozyme (HEL) immobilized on a sensor chip surface [Biophys. J. 83 (2002) 2946]; and (b) the binding and dissociation of recombinant Fab in solution to random NHS-coupled Cys-HEL and oriented thiol-coupled Cys-HEL immobilized on a sensor chip surface [Methods 20 (2000) 310]. Single- and dual-fractal models were employed to fit the data. Values of the binding and the dissociation rate coefficient(s) and the fractal dimensions were obtained from a regression analysis provided by Corel Quattro Pro 8.0 (Corel Corporation Limited, Ottawa, Canada. 1997). The binding rate coefficients are quite sensitive to the degree of heterogeneity on the sensor chip surface. It is of interest to compare the results obtained by the fractal analysis with that of the original analysis [Biophys. J. 83 (2002) 2946]. For example, as one goes from the binding of 21 nM HH10/HEL to the binding of 640 nM HH10/HEL(K97A), Sinha et al. [Biophys. J. 83 (2002) 29461 indicate that the enhancement of diffusional encounter rates may be due to 'electrostatic steering' (a long-range interaction). Our analysis indicates that there is an increase in the value of the fractal dimension, Df1 by a factor of 1.12 from a value of 2.133-2.385. This increase in the degree of heterogeneity on the surface leads to an increase in the binding rate coefficient, k1 by a factor of 1.59 from 12.92 to 20.57. The fractal analysis of binding and dissociation of recombinant Fab in solution to random NHS-coupled Cys-HEL and oriented thiol-coupled Cys-HEL immobilized on a sensor chip [Methods 20 (2000) 310] surface are consistent with the degree of heterogeneity present on the sensor chip surface for the random and the oriented case. As expected, the random case will exhibit a higher degree of heterogeneity than the oriented case, leading to subsequently a higher binding rate coefficient.  相似文献   

5.
Antibody immobilization on a solid surface is inevitable in the preparation of immunochips/sensors. Antibody-binding proteins such as proteins A and G have been extensively employed to capture antibodies on sensor surfaces with right orientations, maintaining their full functionality. Because of their synthetic versatility and stability, in general, small molecules have more advantages than proteins. Nevertheless, no small molecule has been used for oriented and specific antibody immobilization. Here is described a novel strategy to immobilize an antibody on various sensor surfaces by using a small antibody-binding peptide. The peptide binds specifically to the Fc domain of immunoglobulin G (IgG) and, therefore, affords a properly oriented antibody surface. Surface plasmon resonance analysis indicated that a peptide linked to a gold chip surface through a hydrophilic linker efficiently captured human and rabbit IgGs. Moreover, antibodies captured by the peptide exhibited higher antigen binding capacity compared with randomly immobilized antibodies. Peptide-mediated antibody immobilization was successfully applied on the surfaces of biosensor substrates such as magnetic particles and glass slides. The antibody-binding peptide conjugate introduced in this work is the first small molecule linker that offers a highly stable and specific surface platform for antibody immobilization in immunoassays.  相似文献   

6.

Background

G-quadruplexes (G4s) are nucleic acids secondary structures formed in guanine-rich sequences. Anti-G4 antibodies represent a tool for the direct investigation of G4s in cells. Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) is a highly sensitive technology, suitable for assessing the affinity between biomolecules. We here aimed at improving the orientation of an anti-G4 antibody on the SPR sensor chip to optimize detection of binding antigens.

Methods

SPR was employed to characterize the anti-G4 antibody interaction with G4 and non-G4 oligonucleotides. Dextran-functionalized sensor chips were used both in covalent coupling and capturing procedures.

Results

The use of two leading molecule for orienting the antibody of interest allowed to improve its activity from completely non-functional to 65% active. The specificity of the anti-G4 antobody for G4 structures could thus be assessed with high sensitivity and reliability.

Conclusions

Optimization of the immobilization protocol for SPR biosensing, allowed us to determine the anti-G4 antibody affinity and specificity for G4 antigens with higher sensitivity with respect to other in vitro assays such as ELISA. Anti-G4 antibody specificity is a fundamental assumption for the future utilization of this kind of antibodies for monitoring G4s directly in cells.

General significance

The heterogeneous orientation of amine-coupling immobilized ligands is a general problem that often leads to partial or complete inactivation of the molecules. Here we describe a new strategy for improving ligand orientation: driving it from two sides. This principle can be virtually applied to every molecule that loses its activity or is poorly immobilized after standard coupling to the SPR chip surface.  相似文献   

7.
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR)-based biosensors have been widely utilized for measuring interactions of a variety of molecules. Fewer examples include higher biological entities such as bacteria and viruses, and even fewer deal with plant viruses. Here, we describe the optimization of an SPR sensor chip for evaluation of the interaction of the economically relevant filamentous Potato virus Y (PVY) with monoclonal antibodies. Different virus isolates were efficiently and stably bound to a previously immobilized polyclonal antibody surface, which remained stable over subsequent injection regeneration steps. The ability of the biosensor to detect and quantify PVY particles was compared with ELISA and RT-qPCR. Stably captured virus surfaces were successfully used to explore kinetic parameters of the interaction of a panel of monoclonal antibodies with two PVY isolates representing the main viral serotypes N and O. In addition, the optimized biosensor proved to be suitable for evaluating whether two given monoclonal antibodies compete for the same epitope within the viral particle surface. The strategy proposed in this work can help to improve existing serologic diagnostic tools that target PVY and will allow investigation of the inherent serological variability of the virus and exploration for new interactions of PVY particles with other proteins.  相似文献   

8.
An analysis of non-biotinylated camptothecin (CPT) binding to the C-20-biotinylated CPT binding peptide NSSQSARR was carried out using two methods, quartz-crystal microbalance (QCM) and surface plasmon resonance (SPR). The peptide was immobilized peptide on a sensor chip and showed a dissociation constant (KD) of approximately 0.1 microM against CPT in QCM and SPR experiments.  相似文献   

9.
Methods for rapid surface immobilization of bioactive small molecules with control over orientation and immobilization density are highly desirable for biosensor and microarray applications. In this Study, we use a highly efficient covalent bioorthogonal [4+2] cycloaddition reaction between trans-cyclooctene (TCO) and 1,2,4,5-tetrazine (Tz) to enable the microfluidic immobilization of TCO/Tz-derivatized molecules. We monitor the process in real-time under continuous flow conditions using surface plasmon resonance (SPR). To enable reversible immobilization and extend the experimental range of the sensor surface, we combine a non-covalent antigen-antibody capture component with the cycloaddition reaction. By alternately presenting TCO or Tz moieties to the sensor surface, multiple capture-cycloaddition processes are now possible on one sensor surface for on-chip assembly and interaction studies of a variety of multi-component structures. We illustrate this method with two different immobilization experiments on a biosensor chip; a small molecule, AP1497 that binds FK506-binding protein 12 (FKBP12); and the same small molecule as part of an immobilized and in situ-functionalized nanoparticle.  相似文献   

10.
Hasegawa K  Ono K  Yamada M  Naiki H 《Biochemistry》2002,41(46):13489-13498
To establish the kinetic model of the extension and dissociation of beta-amyloid fibrils (f(A)beta) in vitro, we analyzed these reactions using a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor. Sonicated f(A)beta were immobilized on the surface of the SPR sensor chip as seeds. The SPR signal increased linearly as a function of time after amyloid beta-peptides (Abeta) were injected into the f(A)beta-immobilized chips. The extension of f(A)beta was confirmed by atomic force microscopy. When flow cells were washed with running buffer, the SPR signal decreased with time after the extension reaction. The curve fitting resolved the dissociation reaction into the fast exponential and slow linear decay phases. Kinetic analysis of the effect of Abeta/f(A)beta concentrations on the reaction rate indicated that both the extension reaction and the slow linear phase of the dissociation were consistent with a first-order kinetic model; i.e., the extension/dissociation reactions proceed via consecutive association/dissociation of Abeta onto/from the end of existing fibrils. On the basis of this model, the critical monomer concentration ([M](e)) and the equilibrium association constant (K) were calculated, for the first time, to be 20 nM and 5 x 10(7) M(-1), respectively. Alternatively, [M](e) was directly measured as 200 nM, which may represent the equilibrium between the extension reaction and the fast phase of the dissociation. The SPR biosensor is a useful quantitative tool for the kinetic and thermodynamic study of the molecular mechanisms of f9A)beta formation in vitro.  相似文献   

11.
A simple protocol for generating a highly stable and active surface plasmon resonance (SPR) sensor surface of recombinant human hexahistidine cyclophilin A (His-CypA) is described. The sensor surface was sensitive and stable enough to allow, for the first time, the screening and ranking of several novel small-molecule (Mr approximately 250-500 Da) ligands in a competition binding assay with cyclosporin A (CsA). It also allowed us to accurately determine the kinetic rate constants for the interaction between His-CypA and CsA. His-CypA was first captured on a Ni2+-nitrilotriacetic acid (NTA) sensor chip and was then briefly covalently stabilized, coupling via primary amines. The significant baseline drift observed due to dissociation of weakly bound His-CypA from the Ni2+-NTA moiety was eliminated, resulting in a surface that was stable for at least 36 h. In addition, immobilized protein activity levels were high, typically between 85 and 95%, assayed by the interaction between His-CypA and CsA. The mean equilibrium dissociation constant for CsA (K(dCsA)) binding to the immobilized His-CypA was 23+/-6 nM, with on and off rates of 0.53+/-0.1 microM(-1) s(-1) and 1.2+/-0.1 (x 10(-2)) s(-1), respectively. These values agree well with the values for the corresponding binding constants determined from steady-state and kinetic fluorescence titrations in solution.  相似文献   

12.
The growth factor receptor-binding protein 2-Src homology 2 (Grb2-SH2) domain plays an important role in the oncogenic Ras signal transduction pathway, therefore, peptidic inhibitors of the Grb2-SH2 domain has been chosen as our target for the development of antiproliferative agents. The inhibitory effects of peptide analogs on the Grb2-SH2 domain have been determined by using surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technology developed with the BIACORE biosensor. Recently, we reported the analysis of interactions between peptides and the GST-Grb2-SH2 that was immobilized on the surface of sensor chip by using BIACORE biosensor (the protein-immobilized method). Herein, we analyze interactions of peptides with the GST-Grb2-SH2 that was captured by the anti-GST antibodies immobilized on the surface of sensor chip (the protein-captured method). Results obtained by both methods are in good correlation, indicating the immobilization of GST-Grb2-SH2 on the sensor chip did not significantly affect the binding of Grb2-SH2 with peptides. Both SPR-based assays are very sensitive bioanalytical methods and can be applied in screening inhibitors of target proteins or purifying GST-fusion proteins, however, considering the efficiency and the cost, the GST-Grb2-SH2-immobilized method is suggested for routinely determining the binding potency of inhibitors of Grb2-SH2.  相似文献   

13.
EGF-induced activation of EGFR tyrosine kinase is known to be inhibited by ganglioside GM3, its dimer, and other mimetics. However, details of the interaction, such as kinetic properties, have not yet been clarified. The direct interaction is now defined by the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technique. To determine the affinity of EGFR for lyso-GM3 or lyso-GM3 mimetic, these glycolipid ligands were covalently immobilized onto a sensor chip, and binding affinities were investigated. Results of these studies confirmed the direct interaction of lyso-GM3 or its mimetic with EGFR. A strong interaction between EGFR and lyso-GM3 or its mimetic was indicated by increased binding of EGFR to glycolipid-immobilized surface, in an EGFR dose-dependent manner.  相似文献   

14.
HX531 is a retinoid X receptor (RXR) antagonist that inhibits 9-cis retinoic acid-induced neutrophilic differentiation of HL-60 cells. In order to elucidate the inhibitory mechanism of HX531, we have developed a novel ligand sensor assay for RXR in which the receptor-coactivator interaction is directly monitored using surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor technology. A 20-mer peptide from steroid receptor coactivator-1 (SRC-1), containing nuclear receptor interaction motif LXXLL was immobilized on the surface of a BIAcore sensor chip. Injection of human recombinant RXR with or without 9-cis retinoic acid resulted in ligand-dependent interaction with the SRC-1 peptide. Kinetic analysis revealed dissociation constants (KD) of 9-cis RA-preincubated RXR to SRC-1 was 5.92 x 10(-8)M. Using this technique, we found that 1 microM HX531 reduced the ka value of liganded-RXR with SRC-1, suggesting that HX531 reduced the affinity of RXR to SRC-1. This SPR assay system was applied to obtain quantitative kinetic data of RXR ligand binding to the SRC-1 peptide and the alteration of these data by antagonists.  相似文献   

15.
A fractal analysis is presented for the binding and dissociation of different heart-related compounds in solution to receptors immobilized on biosensor surfaces. The data analyzed include LCAT (lecithin cholesterol acyl transferase) concentrations in solution to egg white apoA-I rHDL immobilized on a biosensor chip surface (), native, mildly oxidized, and strongly oxidized LDL in solution to a heparin-modified Au-surface of a surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor (), and TRITC-labeled HDL in solution to a bare optical fiber surface (). Single-and dual-fractal models were used to fit the data. Values of the binding and the dissociation rate coefficient(s), affinity values, and the fractal dimensions were obtained from the regression analysis provided by Corel Quattro Pro 8.0 (). The binding rate coefficients are quite sensitive to the degree of heterogeneity on the sensor chip surface. Predictive equations are developed for the binding rate coefficient as a function of the degree of heterogeneity present on the sensor chip surface and on the LCAT concentration in solution and for the affinity as a function of the ratio of fractal dimensions present in the binding and the dissociation phases. The analysis presented provided physical insights into these analyte-receptor reactions occurring on different biosensor surfaces.  相似文献   

16.
Protein-protein interactions are pivotal to most, if not all, physiological processes, and understanding the nature of such interactions is a central step in biological research. Surface Plasmon Resonance (SPR) is a sensitive detection technique for label-free study of bio-molecular interactions in real time. In a typical SPR experiment, one component (usually a protein, termed ''ligand'') is immobilized onto a sensor chip surface, while the other (the ''analyte'') is free in solution and is injected over the surface. Association and dissociation of the analyte from the ligand are measured and plotted in real time on a graph called a sensogram, from which pre-equilibrium and equilibrium data is derived. Being label-free, consuming low amounts of material, and providing pre-equilibrium kinetic data, often makes SPR the method of choice when studying dynamics of protein interactions. However, one has to keep in mind that due to the method''s high sensitivity, the data obtained needs to be carefully analyzed, and supported by other biochemical methods. SPR is particularly suitable for studying membrane proteins since it consumes small amounts of purified material, and is compatible with lipids and detergents. This protocol describes an SPR experiment characterizing the kinetic properties of the interaction between a membrane protein (an ABC transporter) and a soluble protein (the transporter''s cognate substrate binding protein).  相似文献   

17.
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) is a powerful technique for measuring molecular interaction in real-time. SPR can be used to detect molecule to cell interactions as well as molecule to molecule interactions. In this study, the SPR-based biosensing technique was applied to real-time monitoring of odorant-induced cellular reactions. An olfactory receptor, OR I7, was fused with a rho-tag import sequence at the N-terminus of OR I7, and expressed on the surface of human embryonic kidney (HEK)-293 cells. These cells were then immobilized on a SPR sensor chip. The intensity of the SPR response was linearly dependent on the amount of injected odorant. Among all the aldehyde containing odorants tested, the SPR response was specifically high for octanal, which is the known cognate odorant for the OR I7. This SPR response is believed to have resulted from intracellular signaling triggered by the binding of odorant molecules to the olfactory receptors expressed on the cell surface. This SPR system combined with olfactory receptor-expressed cells provides a new olfactory biosensor system for selective and quantitative detection of volatile compounds.  相似文献   

18.
A surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor was used to study the interaction of human interleukin-5 (hIL5) with its receptor. IL5 is a major growth factor in the production and activation of eosinophilis. The receptor for IL5 is composed of two subunits, α and β. The α subunit provides the specificity for IL5 and consist of an extracellular soluble domain, a single transmembrane region and a cytoplasmic tail. We expressed the soluble domain of the human IL5 receptor α subunit (shIL5Rα) and human IL5 (hIL5) in Drosophila. Both hIL5 and shIL5Rα were immobilized separately through amine groups onto the carboxylated dextran layer of sensor chips of the BIAcore? (Pharmacia) SPR biosensor after N-hydroxysuccinimide/carbodiimide activation of the chip surface. Interactions were measured for the complementary macromolecule, either shIL5Rα or hIL5, in solution. Kinetics of binding of soluble analyst to immobilized ligand were measured and from this the association rate constant, dissociation rate constant and equilibrium dissociation constant (Kd) were derived. With immobilized shIL5Rα and soluble hIL5, the measured Kd was 2 nM . A similar value was obtained by titration calorimetry. The Kd for Drosophila expressed receptor and IL5 is higher than the values reported for proteins expressed in different systems, likely due to differences in the methods of interaction analysis used for differences in protein glycosylation. Receptor-IL5 binding was relatively pH independent between pH 6.5 and 9.5. Outside this range the dissociation rate increased with compressibility little increased in association rate. The values obtained for the interaction of hIL5 and shIL5Rα were found to depend on which component was immobilized; the Kd was 5.5 nM with immobilized hIL5 and soluble shIL5Rα. The SPR biosensor provides a unified methodology to measure the interaction properties of shIL5Rα and hIL5 derivatives, mutants and mimetic as well as to evaluate potential antagonists of the receptor-cytokine interaction.  相似文献   

19.
As populations age, osteoporosis is becoming an important public health care problem. Urinary level of the cross-linked N-telopeptide of type I collagen has been reported to be a sensitive marker of bone resorption. Recently, we synthesized and characterized 10 overlapping peptides covering the N-telopeptide of alpha-2 type I collagen and reported their relative binding response to anti-type I collagen cross-linked N-telopeptide (NTX) antibodies determined by a competitive-inhibition enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). In this study, we design an assay based on the surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technology to detect binding interaction of each peptide fragment of NTX with the anti-NTX monoclonal antibodies. Anti-NTX monoclonal antibodies were immobilized on the surface of sensor chip by amine-coupling procedure. Serial dilutions of each peptide were prepared and injected separately onto the antibodies-immobilized sensor chip. The real-time association and dissociation interactions of each peptide were detected and reported as sensorgrams. Binding response of each peptide to the monoclonal antibodies was determined, and the SPR results were compared with the ELISA results. We demonstrate that the trends of binding potency of peptide fragments detected by SPR are in good correlation to the results obtained by ELISA, indicating that our developed SPR-based method can be further applied to detect the NTX fragments in urine and to monitor the bone loss in humans. The potent peptide fragments identified by both assays are promising for further preparation of specific monoclonal antibodies in order to develop bioassays for bone loss in humans.  相似文献   

20.
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) spectroscopy has been used to study DNA assembly, DNA hybridization, and protein-DNA interactions on two streptavidin (SA) sensor chips. On one chip, SA molecules are immobilized on a biotin-exposed surface, forming an ordered two-dimensional (2D) SA monolayer. The other chip, BIAcore's SA chip, contains SA molecules immobilized within a three-dimensional (3D) carboxylated dextran matrix. Compared to the 2D chip, the 3D SA matrix allows for a slower immobilization rate of biotinylated DNA due to diffusion limitation in the dextran matrix, but with twice the amount of the immobilized DNA due to the greater number of reactive sites, which in turn enables a higher sensitivity for DNA hybridization detection. Interestingly, having a greater DNA probe dispersion in the 3D matrix does not induce a higher DNA hybridization efficiency. In a study of protein binding to immobilized DNA (estrogen receptor to estrogen response elements), aiming at assessing the DNA sequence dependent protein binding behavior, the 2D and 3D chips produce different binding characteristics. On the 2D chip, the protein binding exhibits a better selectivity to the specific sequences, regardless of binding stringency (e.g. salt concentration), whereas on the 3D chip, the liquid handling system needs to be optimized in order to minimize transport limitations and to detect small affinity differences. Through this study we demonstrate that the physicochemical structure of SPR chips affects the apparent binding behaviors of biomolecules. When interpreting SPR binding curves and selecting a sensor chip, these effects should be taken into account.  相似文献   

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