Literature DB >> 10051846

A strategy for the generation of surfaces presenting ligands for studies of binding based on an active ester as a common reactive intermediate: a surface plasmon resonance study.

J Lahiri1, L Isaacs, J Tien, G M Whitesides.   

Abstract

This paper describes the immobilization of ten proteins and two low-molecular-weight ligands on mixed self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of alkanethiolates on gold generated from the tri(ethylene glycol)-terminated thiol 1 (HS(CH2)11(OCH2CH2)3OH) (chi(1) = 1.0-0.0) and the longer, carboxylic acid-terminated thiol2(HS(CH2)11(OCH2-CH2)6OCH2CO2H) (chi(2) = 0.0-1.0). The immobilization was achieved by a two-step procedure: generation of reactive N-hydroxysuccinimidyl esters from the carboxylic acid groups of 2 in the SAM and coupling of these groups with amines on the protein or ligand. Because this method involves a common reactive intermediate that is easily prepared, it provides a convenient method for attaching ligands to SAMs for studies using surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy (and, in principle, other bioanalytical methods that use derivatized SAMs on gold, silver, and other surfaces). These SAMs were resistant to nonspecific adsorption of proteins having a wide range of molecular weights and isoelectric points. The pH of the coupling buffer, the concentration of protein, the ionic strength of the solution of protein, and the molecular weight of the protein all influenced the amount of the protein that was immobilized. For the proteins investigated in detail--carbonic anhydrase and lysozyme--the highest quantities of immobilized proteins were obtained when using a low ionic strength solution at a value of pH approximately one unit below the isoelectric point (pI) of the protein, at a concentration of approximately 0.5 mg mL-1. Comparisons of the kinetic and thermodynamic constants describing binding of carbonic anhydrase and vancomycin to immobilized benzenesulfonamide and N-alpha-Ac-Lys-D-Ala-D-Ala groups, respectively, on mixed SAMs (by methods described in this paper) and in the carboxymethyl dextran matrix of commercially available substrates yielded (for these systems) essentially indistinguishable values of Kd, koff, and kon.

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Year:  1999        PMID: 10051846     DOI: 10.1021/ac980959t

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Anal Chem        ISSN: 0003-2700            Impact factor:   6.986


  76 in total

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