| Literature DB >> 30778383 |
Gustav Emilsson1, Evelyn Röder1, Bita Malekian2, Kunli Xiong2, John Manzi3, Feng-Ching Tsai3, Nam-Joon Cho4, Marta Bally5, Andreas Dahlin2.
Abstract
Biosensors based on plasmonic nanostructures are widely used in various applications and benefit from numerous operational advantages. One type of application where nanostructured sensors provide unique value in comparison with, for instance, conventional surface plasmon resonance, is investigations of the influence of nanoscale geometry on biomolecular binding events. In this study, we show that plasmonic "nanowells" conformally coated with a continuous lipid bilayer can be used to detect the preferential binding of the insulin receptor tyrosine kinase substrate protein (IRSp53) I-BAR domain to regions of negative surface curvature, i.e., the interior of the nanowells. Two different sensor architectures with and without an additional niobium oxide layer are compared for this purpose. In both cases, curvature preferential binding of IRSp53 (at around 0.025 nm-1 and higher) can be detected qualitatively. The high refractive index niobium oxide influences the near field distribution and makes the signature for bilayer formation less clear, but the contrast for accumulation at regions of negative curvature is slightly higher. This work shows the first example of analyzing preferential binding of an average-sized and biologically important protein to negative membrane curvature in a label-free manner and in real-time, illustrating a unique application for nanoplasmonic sensors.Entities:
Keywords: IRSp53; curvature; insulin receptor tyrosine kinase substrate p53; membranes; plasmons; sensors
Year: 2019 PMID: 30778383 PMCID: PMC6369594 DOI: 10.3389/fchem.2019.00001
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Chem ISSN: 2296-2646 Impact factor: 5.221
Scheme 1Lipids used for bilayer formation and the IRSp53 protein interacting with a membrane. Note that PS and PIP2 are net negatively charged (Na+ and are counterions from salt formation). The electrostatic interaction with lipid bilayers is believed to occur with negatively charged lipids at the outer rim of the elongated protein, promoting a concave membrane shape.
Figure 1Using QCMD to verify the biomolecular interaction. (A) Example of bilayer formation on planar SiO2 with lipids containing 10% PS, 10% PIP2, and 80% DOPC. (B) Binding of IRSp53 at a relatively low concentration to different lipid compositions with negative charge (No binding was observed to pure DOPC bilayers). Note that for these curves the signal approaches ~12 Hz simply due to depletion of molecules in the liquid volume. Binding is irreversible as illustrated upon rinsing (dotted lines).
Figure 2The two types of nanowells. (A) Extinction spectra in water and nanostructure schematics. (B) Electron microscopy image of nanowells in SiO2 coated with SiNxOy. (C) Simulated near fields at the peak and dip wavelengths for square arrays with periodicity of 300 nm in water. The bar plots show the average field strength on the planar surface (outside) vs. the curved surface exposed inside the nanowells (inside), in both cases 5 nm away from the SiNxOy coating (which has refractive index 1.5).
Figure 3Bilayer formation and model protein binding. (A) Signals from bilayer formation (with vesicles containing PS) on the nanoplasmonic sensor surfaces. An ~5 times higher concentration of vesicles (~300 μg/mL) were introduced to the Nb2O5 structures, which is why a step-like change is observed upon liquid exchange (This is due to light scattering by vesicles in the bulk). (B) Example data of binding of NeutrAvidin to bilayers with biotinylated lipids. Peak and dip signals are shown for both structures.
Figure 4IRSp53 binding with negative curvature preference. (A) Kinetics of IRSp53 binding (introduced at 0 min) to membranes with negative lipids on Nb2O5 nanowells. For the lower concentration no peak shift is detected. (B) Dip and peak signals for IRSp53 compared to NeutrAvidin binding to Nb2O5 nanowells. (C) Dip and peak signals for IRSp53 compared to bilayer formation on SiO2 nanowells. (D) Summary of ζ values with error margins. For Nb2O5 nanowells, NeutrAvidin is used as the reference and for SiO2 nanowells, the preceding bilayer is used.