| Literature DB >> 29397682 |
Fenni Zhang1,2, Wenwen Jing1, Ashley Hunt1, Hui Yu1, Yunze Yang1,2, Shaopeng Wang1, Hong-Yuan Chen3, Nongjian Tao1,3,2.
Abstract
Measuring molecular binding to membrane proteins is critical for understanding cellular functions, validating biomarkers, and screening drugs. Despite the importance, developing such a capability has been a difficult challenge, especially for small-molecule binding to membrane proteins in their native cellular environment. Here we show that the binding of both large and small molecules to membrane proteins can be quantified on single cells by trapping single cells with a microfluidic device and detecting binding-induced cellular membrane deformation on the nanometer scale with label-free optical imaging. We develop a thermodynamic model to describe the binding-induced membrane deformation, validate the model by examining the dependence of membrane deformation on cell stiffness, membrane protein expression level, and binding affinity, and study four major types of membrane proteins, including glycoproteins, ion channels, G-protein coupled receptors, and tyrosine kinase receptors. The single-cell detection capability reveals the importance of local membrane environment on molecular binding and variability in the binding kinetics of different cell lines and heterogeneity of different cells within the same cell line.Entities:
Keywords: binding kinetics; label-free detection; membrane proteins; microfluidics; single-cell analysis
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29397682 PMCID: PMC5851003 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.8b00235
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881