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1.
The classical method of measuring binding constants with affinity-based biosensors involves testing several analyte concentrations over the same ligand surface and regenerating the surface between binding cycles. Here we describe an alternative approach to collecting kinetic binding data, which we call "kinetic titration." This method involves sequentially injecting an analyte concentration series without any regeneration steps. Through a combination of simulation and experimentation, we show that this method can be as robust as the classical method of analysis. In addition, kinetic titrations can be more efficient than the conventional data collection method and allow us to fully characterize analyte binding to ligand surfaces that are difficult to regenerate.  相似文献   

2.
The present article considers the influence of heterogeneity in a mobile analyte or in an immobilized ligand population on the surface binding kinetics and equilibrium isotherms. We describe strategies for solving the inverse problem of calculating two-dimensional distributions of rate and affinity constants from experimental data on surface binding kinetics, such as obtained from optical biosensors. Although the characterization of a heterogeneous population of analytes binding to uniform surface sites may be possible under suitable experimental conditions, computational difficulties currently limit this approach. In contrast, the case of uniform analytes binding to heterogeneous populations of surface sites is computationally feasible, and can be combined with Tikhonov-Phillips and maximum entropy regularization techniques that provide the simplest distribution that is consistent with the data. The properties of this ligand distribution analysis are explored with several experimental and simulated data sets. The resulting two-dimensional rate and affinity constant distributions can describe well experimental kinetic traces measured with optical biosensors. The use of kinetic surface binding data can give significantly higher resolution than affinity distributions from the binding isotherms alone. The shape and the level of detail of the calculated distributions depend on the experimental conditions, such as contact times and the concentration range of the analyte. Despite the flexibility introduced by considering surface site distributions, the impostor application of this model to surface binding data from transport limited binding processes or from analyte distributions can be identified by large residuals, if a sufficient range of analyte concentrations and contact times are used. The distribution analysis can provide a rational interpretation of complex experimental surface binding kinetics, and provides an analytical tool for probing the homogeneity of the populations of immobilized protein.  相似文献   

3.
The quantitative detection of low analyte concentrations in complex samples is becoming an urgent need in biomedical, food and environmental fields. Biosensors, being hybrid devices composed by a biological receptor and a signal transducer, represent valuable alternatives to non biological analytical instruments because of the high specificity of the biomolecular recognition. The vast range of existing protein ligands enable those macromolecules to be used as efficient receptors to cover a diversity of applications. In addition, appropriate protein engineering approaches enable further improvement of the receptor functioning such as enhancing affinity or specificity in the ligand binding. Recently, several protein-only sensors are being developed, in which either both the receptor and signal transducer are parts of the same protein, or that use the whole cell where the protein is produced as transducer. In both cases, as no further chemical coupling is required, the production process is very convenient. However, protein platforms, being rather rigid, restrict the proper signal transduction that necessarily occurs through ligand-induced conformational changes. In this context, insertional protein engineering offers the possibility to develop new devices, efficiently responding to ligand interaction by dramatic conformational changes, in which the specificity and magnitude of the sensing response can be adjusted up to a convenient level for specific analyte species. In this report we will discuss the major engineering approaches taken for the designing of such instruments as well as the relevant examples of resulting protein-only biosensors.  相似文献   

4.
Characterization of the biomolecules involved in molecular processes occurring in biological systems such as the human cell remains central to biology, biotechnology, and medicine. One of the preferred methods of selectively purifying specific classes of biomolecules from complex biological matrices for further characterization is affinity chromatography, which relies on the specific interaction between an analyte in solution and a solid adsorbent. Titanium dioxide-based affinity chromatography has proven to be a versatile tool in enrichment of various compounds such as phosphorylated biomolecules due to its unique ion and ligand exchange properties and high stability towards pH and temperature. Recently, titanium dioxide chromatography was introduced in proteomics as a highly specific method for enriching phosphorylated peptides - a method, which has been widely adapted by the field of phosphoproteomics. Additional studies have shown the potential of this sorbent in purification of other acidic post-translational modified peptides, such as sialylated glycopeptides, thereby targeting the sialiome, defined as the content of sialic acid containing glycoproteins of a given cell, body fluid or tissue. The development of TiO(2)-based chromatographic strategies for separation of various biomolecules from its introduction for small molecules more than 20 years ago until recent proteomics applications today will be reviewed here.  相似文献   

5.
Surface plasmon resonance-based biosensors are now acknowledged as robust and reliable instruments to determine the kinetic parameters related to the interactions between biomolecules. These kinetic parameters are used in screening campaigns: there is a considerable interest in reducing the experimental time, thus improving the throughput of the surface plasmon resonance assays. Kinetic parameters are typically obtained by analyzing data from several injections of a given analyte at different concentrations over a surface where its binding partner has been immobilized. It has been already proven that an iterative optimization approach aiming at determining optimal analyte injections to be performed online can significantly reduce the experimentation time devoted to kinetic parameter determination, without any detrimental effect on their standard errors. In this study, we explore the potential of this iterative optimization approach to further reduce experiment duration by combining it with the simultaneous injection of two analytes.  相似文献   

6.
Using both experimental assays and fluid-dynamic finite element simulation models, we directly compared the achievable performance limits of four distinct assay configurations for label-free detection of an analyte from a test sample on a biosensor surface. The assay configurations studied in this work included a biosensor incorporated into the bottom surface of a microplate well and a microfluidic channel. For each configuration, we compared assay performance for the scenario in which the entire bottom surface of the fluid-handling vessel is coated with capture ligands with assay performance for the scenario in which the capture ligands are applied in the form of localized spots. As a model system, we used detection of the protein biomarker tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α) using immobilized TNF-α capture antibody. Results show that the microfluidic assay format dramatically reduces the time required to establish a stable equilibrium. Spot-based assays are advantageous for microplate-based detection for reducing the time required for equilibrium sensor response. The results derived are generally applicable to any label-free biosensor technology and any ligand-analyte system with adjustable variables that include sensor mass density sensitivity, analyte-ligand adsorption/desorption rate constants, immobilized ligand density, flow channel geometry, flow rate, and spot size.  相似文献   

7.
The majority of efforts to increase specificity or sensitivity in biosensors result in trade-offs with little to no gain in overall accuracy. This is because a biosensor cannot be more accurate than the affinity interaction it is based on. Accordingly, we have developed a new class of reagents based on mathematical principles of cooperativity to enhance the accuracy of the affinity interaction. Tentacle probes (TPs) have a hairpin structure similar to molecular beacons (MBs) for enhanced specificity, but are modified by the addition of a capture probe for increased kinetics and affinity. They produce kinetic rate constants up to 200-fold faster than MB with corresponding stem strengths. Concentration-independent specificity was observed with no false positives at up to 1 mM concentrations of variant analyte. In contrast, MBs were concentration dependent and experienced false positives above 3.88 muM of variant analyte. The fast kinetics of this label-free reagent may prove important for extraction efficiency, hence sensitivity and detection time, in microfluidic assays. The concentration-independent specificity of TPs may prove extremely useful in assays where starting concentrations and purities are unknown as would be the case in bioterror or clinical point of care diagnostics.  相似文献   

8.
Here we describe a new type of biosensor element for detecting proteins in solution at nanomolar concentrations. We tethered a 3.4 kDa polyethylene glycol chain at a defined site within the lumen of the transmembrane protein pore formed by staphylococcal alpha-hemolysin. The free end of the polymer was covalently attached to a biotin molecule. On incorporation of the modified pore into a lipid bilayer, the biotinyl group moves from one side of the membrane to the other, and is detected by reversible capture with a mutant streptavidin. The capture events are observed as changes in ionic current passing through single pores in planar bilayers. Accordingly, the modified pore allows detection of a protein analyte at the single-molecule level, facilitating both quantification and identification through a distinctive current signature. The approach has higher time resolution compared with other kinetic measurements, such as those obtained by surface plasmon resonance.  相似文献   

9.
A non-enzymatic approach to signal amplification has practical advantages over conventional target amplification methods. We have designed a simple, cost-efficient signal amplification system that can be used to enhance the detection of nucleic acids or protein. The signal amplification process requires initial capture of analyte by a specific probe, which, depending on the analyte, can be an oligomer or an antibody. Once the analyte is captured, amplification moieties are applied to significantly enhance the sensitivity of analyte detection. Nucleic acid amplification is typically greater than 1000-fold, increasing the sensitivity of target detection to less than 1 amol/100 microL. This amplification strategy presents a very flexible system with components that are easily altered to accommodate diverse assay requirements.  相似文献   

10.
Identification of mineral-associated biosignatures is of significance for retrieving biochemical information from geological records here on Earth and for detecting signs of life on other planets, such as Mars. An investigation using laser desorption Fourier transform mass spectrometry was conducted to determine whether geomatrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (GALDI) can be used to detect amino acids (e.g., histidine, threonine, and cysteine) and small proteins (e.g., gramicidin S) associated with mineral phases and whether the geomatrix impacts detection. Iron oxide (Fe2 O 3 ) and sodium chloride (NaCl) were investigated as clean chemical analogues of hematite and halite, respectively, which have both been detected on the surface of Mars. Samples were prepared by 2 methods: (1) application of analyte solution to the geomatrix surface with subsequent drying; and (2) physical mixing of analyte and geomatrix. Amino acids incorporated within NaCl by physical mixing yielded a better signal-to-noise ratio than those that were applied to the surface of a NaCl pellet. The composition of the geomatrix had an influence on the detection of biomolecules. Peaks corresponding to the cation-attached biomolecular ions were observed for the NaCl prepared samples. However, no biomolecular ion species were observed in samples using Fe 2 O 3 as geomatrix. Instead, only minor peaks that may correspond to ions derived from fragments of the biomolecules were obtained.  相似文献   

11.
Sensitive detection assays are a prerequisite for the analysis of small amounts of samples derived from biological material. There is a great demand for highly sensitive and robust detection techniques to analyze biomolecules. The combination of catalytic active DNA (DNAzyme) with a peroxidase activity with rolling circle amplification (RCA) is a promising alternative to common detection systems. The rolling circle amplification leads to a product with tandemly linked copies of DNAzymes. The continuous signal generation of the amplified DNAzymes results in an increased sensitivity. The combination of two amplification reactions, namely RCA and DNAzymes, results in increased signal intensity by a factor of 10(6). With this approach the labeling of samples can be avoided. The advantage of the introduced assay is the usage of nucleic acids as biosensors for the detection of biomolecules. Coupling of the analyte molecule to the detection molecules allows the direct detection of the analyte molecule. The described label-free hotpot assay has a broad potential field of applications. The hotpot assay can be adapted to detect and analyze RNA, DNA and proteins down to femtomolar concentrations in a miniaturized platform with a total reaction solution of 50 nl. The applicability of the assay for diagnostics and research will be shown with a focus on high throughput systems using a nano-well platform.  相似文献   

12.
Biomolecules, especially proteins and nucleic acids, have been widely studied to develop biochips for various applications in scientific fields ranging from bioelectronics to stem cell research. However, restrictions exist due to the inherent characteristics of biomolecules, such as instability and the constraint of granting the functionality to the biochip. Introduction of functional nanomaterials, recently being researched and developed, to biomolecules have been widely researched to develop the nanobiohybrid materials because such materials have the potential to enhance and extend the function of biomolecules on a biochip. The potential for applying nanobiohybrid materials is especially high in the field of bioelectronics. Research in bioelectronics is aimed at realizing electronic functions using the inherent properties of biomolecules. To achieve this, various biomolecules possessing unique properties have been combined with novel nanomaterials to develop bioelectronic devices such as highly sensitive electrochemical‐based bioelectronic sensing platforms, logic gates, and biocomputing systems. In this review, recently reported bioelectronic devices based on nanobiohybrid materials are discussed. The authors believe that this review will suggest innovative and creative directions to develop the next generation of multifunctional bioelectronic devices.  相似文献   

13.
A new immunoassay technique based on measurement of conductance changes in solutions is described. The assay employs an immobilized monoclonal antibody to capture a protein analyte along with a second antibody to the same analyte, conjugated to an enzyme capable of producing ions which are measured conductimetrically. Urease was selected as the enzyme, because it produces, from urea, four ions for each catalytic event. The analyte studied was human chorionic gonadotropin in serum. Higher concentrations of analyte during incubation with immobilized antibody and antibody-urease conjugate led to increased binding of the latter. After removal of unbound conjugate, urea solution was added and the rate of conductance change measured in the bulk substrate solution. Experiments, performed in polystyrene microtiter wells using a specially designed electrode, demonstrated the ability to measure 30 picomolar concentrations of human chorionic gonadotropin with a 30-s rate measurement. Urease proved to be an excellent labeling enzyme, retaining its activity under the nonionic conditions necessary to maintain low background conductance. Good agreement was obtained between observed rates and those expected from conductimetric theory and known physical parameters. The potential utility of the conductimetric immunoassay lies in the fabrication of biosensor devices for simplification and cost reduction of immunochemical-based instrumentation. Further improvements to the technique are proposed to achieve lower detection limits.  相似文献   

14.
Surface acoustic wave (SAW) devices based on horizontally polarized surface shear waves enable direct and label-free detection of proteins in real time. Binding reactions on the sensor surface are detected by determining changes in surface wave velocity caused mainly by mass adsorption or change of viscoelasticity in the sensing layer. Intermediate hydrogel layers have been proven to be useful to immobilize capture molecules or ligands corresponding to the analyte. However, the SAW signal response strongly depends on the morphology of the hydrogel due to different relative changes of its acoustomechanical parameters such as viscoelasticity and density. In this work five aminodextrans (AMD) and one diamino polyethylene glycol (DA-PEG) were used as intermediate hydrogel layers. Sensors with immobilized streptavidin and samples containing biotinylated bovine serum albumin were used to exemplify affinity assays based on immobilized capture molecules for protein detection. The effects of the three-dimensional AMDs and the two-dimensional (2D) DA-PEG on the SAW signal response were investigated. The signal height decreased with increasing molar mass and increasing amount of immobilized AMD. Consequently, thin hydrogel layers are ideal to obtain optimum signal responses in this type of assay, whereas it is not necessarily a 2D hydrogel that gives the best results.  相似文献   

15.
New biochip technology for label-free detection of pathogens and their toxins   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
microSERS is a new biochip technology that uses surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) microscopy for label-free transduction. The biochip itself comprises pixels of capture biomolecules immobilized on a SERS-active metal surface. Once the biochip has been exposed to the sample and the capture biomolecules have selectively bound their ligands, a Raman microscope is used to collect SERS fingerprints from the pixels on the chip. SERS, like other whole-organism fingerprinting techniques, is very specific. Our initial studies have shown that the Gram-positive Listeria and Gram-negative Legionella bacteria, Bacillus spores and Cryptosporidium oocysts can often be identified at the subspecies/strain level on the basis of SERS fingerprints collected from single organisms. Therefore, pathogens can be individually identified by microSERS, even when organisms that cross-react with the capture biomolecules are present in a sample. Moreover, the SERS fingerprint reflects the physiological state of a bacterial cell, e.g., when pathogenic Listeria and Legionella were cultured under conditions known to affect virulence, their SERS fingerprints changed significantly. Similarly, nonviable (e.g., heat- or UV-killed) microorganisms could be differentiated from their viable counterparts by SERS fingerprinting. Finally, microSERS is also capable of the sensitive and highly specific detection of toxins. Toxins that comprised as little as 0.02% by weight of the biomolecule-toxin complex produced strong, unique fingerprints when spectra collected from the complexes were subtracted from the spectra of the uncomplexed biomolecules. For example, aflatoxins B(1) and G(1) could be detected and individually identified when biochips bearing pixels of antibody or enzyme capture biomolecules were incubated in samples containing one or both aflatoxins, and the spectra were then collected for 20 s from an area of the biomolecule pixel approximately 1 microm in diameter. In the future, we plan to investigate the use of hyperspectral imaging Raman microscopy for collecting fingerprints from all the pixels on the biochip, individually yet simultaneously, to enable the rapid detection of diverse pathogens and their toxins in a sample, using a single biochip.  相似文献   

16.
Biological cell membranes contain various types of ion channels and transmembrane pores in the 1-100 nm range, which are vital for cellular function. Individual channels can be probed electrically, as demonstrated by Neher and Sakmann in 1976 using the patch-clamp technique [Neher and Sakmann (1976) Nature 260, 799-802]. Since the 1990s, this work has inspired the use of protein or solid-state nanopores as inexpensive and ultrafast sensors for the detection of biomolecules, including DNA, RNA and proteins, but with particular focus on DNA sequencing. Solid-state nanopores in particular have the advantage that the pore size can be tailored to the analyte in question and that they can be modified using semi-conductor processing technology. This establishes solid-state nanopores as a new class of single-molecule biosensor devices, in some cases with submolecular resolution. In the present review, we discuss a few of the most important recent developments in this field and how they might be applied to studying protein-protein and protein-DNA interactions or in the context of ultra-fast DNA sequencing.  相似文献   

17.
A sensor capable of detecting a specific DNA sequence was designed by bulk modification of a graphite epoxy composite electrode with streptavidin (2% w/w). Streptavidin is used to immobilise a biotinylated capture DNA probe to the surface of the electrode. Simultaneous hybridisation occurs between the biotin DNA capture probe and the target-DNA and between the target-DNA and a digoxigenin modified probe. The rapid binding kinetic of streptavidin-biotin allows a one step immobilisation/hybridisation procedure. Secondly, enzyme labelling of the DNA duplex occurs via an antigen-antibody reaction between the Dig-dsDNA and an anti-Dig-HRP. Finally, electrochemical detection is achieved through a suitable substrate (H2O2) for the enzyme-labelled duplex. Optimisation of the sensor design, the modifier content and the immobilisation and hybridisation times was attained using a simple nucleotide sequence. Regeneration of the surface is achieved with a simple polishing procedure that shows good reproducibility. The generic use of a modified streptavidin carbon-polymer biocomposite electrode capable of surface regeneration and a one step hybridisation/immobilisation procedure are the main advantages of this approach. In DNA analysis, this procedure, if combined with the polymerase chain reaction, would represent certain advantages with respect to classical techniques, which prove to be time consuming in situations where a simple and rapid detection is required. This innovative developed material may be used for the detection of any analyte that can be coupled to the biotin-streptavidin reaction, as is the case of immunoassays.  相似文献   

18.
Nedelkov D  Nelson RW 《Proteomics》2001,1(11):1441-1446
Biomolecular interaction analysis mass spectrometry (BIA-MS) is a multiplexed bioanalytical approach used in analysis of proteins from complex biological mixtures. It utilizes surface-immobilized ligands for protein affinity retrieval, surface plasmon resonance for monitoring the ligand-protein interaction and matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry for revealing the masses of the biomolecules retrieved by the ligand. In order to explore the utility of BIA-MS in delineation of multiprotein complexes, an in vivo assembled protein complex comprised of retinol binding protein (RBP) and transthyretin (TTR) was investigated. Antibodies to RBP and TTR were utilized as ligands in the analysis of the protein complex present in human plasma. The RBP-TTR complex was retrieved by the anti-RBP antibody as indicated by the presence of both RBP and TTR signals in the mass spectra. RBP signals were not observed in the mass spectra of the material retained on the anti-TTR derivatized surface. In addition, the mass-specific detection in BIA-MS allowed detection of RBP and TTR analyte variants.  相似文献   

19.
Progress in proteomic researches is largely determined by development and implementation of new methods for the revelation and identification of proteins in biological material in a wide concentration range (from 10(-3) M to single molecules). The most perspective approaches to address this problem involve (i) nanotechnological physicochemical procedures for the separation of multicomponent protein mixtures; among these of particular interest are biospecific nanotechnological procedures for selection of proteins from multicomponent protein mixtures with their subsequent concentration on solid support; (ii) identification and counting of single molecules by use of molecular detectors. The prototypes of biospecific nanotechnological procedures, based on the capture of ligand biomolecules by biomolecules of immobilized ligate and the concentration of the captured ligands on appropriate surfaces, are well known; these are affinity chromatography, magnetic biobeads technology, different biosensor methods, etc. Here, we review the most promising nanotechnological approaches for selection of proteins and kinetic characterization of their complexes based on these biospecific methods with subsequent MS/MS identification of proteins and protein complexes. Two major groups of methods for the analysis and identification of individual molecules and their complexes by use of molecular detectors will be reviewed: scanning probe microscopy (SPM) (including atomic-force microscopy) and cryomassdetector technology.  相似文献   

20.
Nanotechnology is the creation and utilization of materials, devices, and systems through the control of matter on the nanometer. The technology has been applied to biodevices such as bioelectronics and biochips to improve their performances. Nanoparticles, such as gold (Au) nanoparticles, are the most widely used of the various other nanotechnologies for manipulation at the nanoscale as well as nanobiosensors. The immobilization of biomolecules is playing an increasingly important role in the development of biodevices with high performance. Nanopatterning technology, which is able to increase the density of chip arrays, offers several advantages, including cost lowering, simultaneous multicomponent detection, and the efficiency increase of biochemical reactions. A microfluidic system incorporated with control of nanoliter of fluids is also one of the main applications of nanotechnologies. This can be widely utilized in the various fields because it can reduce detection time due to tiny amounts of fluids, increase signal-to-noise ratio by nanoparticles in channel, and detect multi-targets simultaneously in one chamber. This article reviews nanotechnologies such as the application of nanoparticles for the detection of biomolecules, the immobilization of biomolecules at nanoscale, nanopatterning technologies, and the microfluidic system for molecular diagnosis.  相似文献   

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