Literature DB >> 27524389

Glycosylated Conductive Polymer: A Multimodal Biointerface for Studying Carbohydrate-Protein Interactions.

Xiangqun Zeng1, Ke Qu1, Abdul Rehman1,2.   

Abstract

Carbohydrate-protein interactions occur through glycoproteins, glycolipids, or polysaccharides displayed on the cell surface with lectins. However, studying these interactions is challenging because of the complexity and heterogeneity of the cell surface, the inherent structural complexity of carbohydrates, and the typically weak affinities of the binding reactions between the lectins and monovalent carbohydrates. The lack of chromophores and fluorophores in carbohydrate structures often drives such investigations toward fluorescence labeling techniques, which usually require tedious and complex synthetic work to conjugate fluorescent tags with additional risk of altering the reaction dynamics. Probing these interactions directly on the cell surface is even more difficult since cells could be too fragile for labeling or labile dynamics could be affected by the labeled molecules that may interfere with the cellular activities, resulting in unwanted cell responses. In contrast, label-free biosensors allow real-time monitoring of carbohydrate-protein interactions in their natural states. A prerequisite, though, for this strategy to work is to mimic the coding information on potential interactions of cell surfaces onto different biosensing platforms, while the complementary binding process can be transduced into a useful signal noninvasively. Through carbohydrate self-assembled monolayers and glycopolymer scaffolds, the multivalency of the naturally existing simple and complex carbohydrates can be mimicked and exploited with label-free readouts (e.g., optical, acoustic, mechanical, electrochemical, and electrical sensors), yet such inquiries reflect only limited aspects of complicated biointeraction processes due to the unimodal transduction. In this Account, we illustrate that functionalized glycosylated conductive polymer scaffolds are the ideal multimodal biointerfaces that not only simplify the immobilization process for surface fabrication via electrochemical polymerization but also enable the simultaneous analysis of the binding events with orthogonal electrical, optical, or mass sensing label-free readouts. We established this approach using polyaniline and polythiophene as examples. Two general methods were demonstrated for glycosylated polymer fabrications (i.e., electropolymerization of monomer bearing α-mannoside residues or click chemistry based mannose conjugation to electrochemically preformed quinone fused polymer with potential to introduce different carbohydrate moieties and construct glycan arrays in a similar manner). Their conjugated π system extending over a large number of recurrent monomer units renders them sensitive optoelectronic materials. The carbohydrate-protein interactions on the side chain could disrupt the electrostatic, H-bonding, steric, or van der Waals interactions within or between polymers, leading to a change of conductivity or optical absorption of the conductive polymers. This will allow concurrent interrogation of these interactions with adjoining biological processes and mechanisms in multimodal fashion. Furthermore, the functionalized glycosylated conductive polymers can be designed and synthesized with controlled oxidation states, desired ionic dopants, and the imperative density and orientation of the sugar ligands that enable the assessment of differential receptor binding profiles of carbohydrate-protein interactions with much more detailed information and high accuracy. Finally, the glycosylated biosensing interfaces were successfully validated for their applications in Gram-negative bacterial detection, antibiotic resistance studies, and antimicrobial susceptibility assays, all based on inferring carbohydrate-protein interactions directly on cell surfaces, thus illustrating their potential uses in infectious disease research, clinical diagnostics, and environmental monitoring of harmful pathogens.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2016        PMID: 27524389     DOI: 10.1021/acs.accounts.6b00181

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acc Chem Res        ISSN: 0001-4842            Impact factor:   22.384


  5 in total

1.  Investigation into the ring-substituted polyanilines and their application for the detection and adsorption of sulfur dioxide.

Authors:  Yuhong Tian; Ke Qu; Xiangqun Zeng
Journal:  Sens Actuators B Chem       Date:  2017-04-12       Impact factor: 7.460

2.  Morphology-Variable Aggregates Prepared from Cholesterol-Containing Amphiphilic Glycopolymers: Their Protein Recognition/Adsorption and Drug Delivery Applications.

Authors:  Zhao Wang; Ting Luo; Amin Cao; Jingjing Sun; Lin Jia; Ruilong Sheng
Journal:  Nanomaterials (Basel)       Date:  2018-02-28       Impact factor: 5.076

Review 3.  Overview of Piezoelectric Biosensors, Immunosensors and DNA Sensors and Their Applications.

Authors:  Miroslav Pohanka
Journal:  Materials (Basel)       Date:  2018-03-19       Impact factor: 3.623

4.  Synthesis and Self-Assembly of Double-Hydrophilic and Amphiphilic Block Glycopolymers.

Authors:  Azis Adharis; Thomas Ketelaar; Amalina G Komarudin; Katja Loos
Journal:  Biomacromolecules       Date:  2019-02-06       Impact factor: 6.988

5.  Synthesis of water-soluble fluorescent polymeric glycoconjugate for the detection of cholera toxin.

Authors:  Lijuan Feng; Mingjun Zhong; Shizhen Zhang; Min Wang; Zhi-Yong Sun; Qi Chen
Journal:  Des Monomers Polym       Date:  2019-08-26       Impact factor: 2.650

  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.