| Literature DB >> 20162233 |
Eric Ouellet1, Christopher Lausted, Tao Lin, Cheng Wei T Yang, Leroy Hood, Eric T Lagally.
Abstract
Surface plasmon resonance imaging (SPRi) is a label-free technique used for the quantitation of binding affinities and concentrations for a wide variety of target molecules. Although SPRi is capable of determining binding constants for multiple ligands in parallel, current commercial instruments are limited to a single analyte stream on multiple ligand spots. Measurement of binding kinetics requires the serial introduction of different analyte concentrations; such repeated experiments are conducted manually and are therefore time-intensive. To address these challenges, we have developed an integrated microfluidic array using soft lithography techniques for high-throughput SPRi-based detection and determination of binding affinities of antibodies against protein targets. The device consists of 264 element-addressable chambers isolated by microvalves. The resulting 700 pL chamber volumes, combined with a serial dilution network for simultaneous interrogation of up to six different analyte concentrations, allow for further speeding detection times. To test for device performance, human alpha-thrombin was immobilized on the sensor surface and anti-human alpha-thrombin IgG was injected across the surface at different concentrations. The equilibrium dissociation constant was determined to be 5.0 +/- 1.9 nM, which agrees well with values reported in the literature. The interrogation of multiple ligands to multiple analytes in a single device was also investigated and samples were recovered with no cross-contamination. Since each chamber can be addressed independently, this array is capable of interrogating binding events from up to 264 different immobilized ligands against multiple analytes in a single experiment. The development of high-throughput protein analytic measurements is a critical technology for systems approaches to biology and medicine.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20162233 DOI: 10.1039/b920589f
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Lab Chip ISSN: 1473-0189 Impact factor: 6.799