Literature DB >> 33289457

Regenerable Biosensors for Small-Molecule Kinetic Characterization Using SPR.

Anders Gunnarsson1, Christopher J Stubbs2, Philip B Rawlins2, Eleanor Taylor-Newman2,3, Wei-Chao Lee4, Stefan Geschwindner1, Vesa Hytönen5, Geoffrey Holdgate6, Rupam Jha7, Göran Dahl1.   

Abstract

A key activity in small-molecule drug discovery is the characterization of compound-target interactions. Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) is a flexible technique for this purpose, with a wide affinity range (micromoles to picomoles), low protein requirements, and the ability to characterize the kinetics of compound binding. However, a key requirement of SPR is the immobilization of the target protein to the surface of the sensor chip. The most commonly used immobilization techniques (covalent immobilization, streptavidin-biotin) are irreversible in nature, which can afford excellent baseline stability but impose limitations throughput for slowly dissociating compounds or unstable targets. Reversible immobilization (e.g., His-tag-Ni-NTA) is possible but typically precludes accurate quantification of slow dissociation kinetics due to baseline drift.Here we present our investigation of three immobilization strategies (dual-His-tagged target protein, His-tagged streptavidin, and switchavidin) that combine the robustness of irreversible immobilization with the flexibility of reversible immobilization. Each has its own advantages and limitations, and while a universal immobilization procedure remains to be found, these strategies add to the immobilization toolbox that enables previously out-of-scope applications. Such applications are highlighted in two examples that greatly increased throughput for the kinetic characterization of potent kinase inhibitors and kinetic profiling of covalent inhibitors.

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Keywords:  surface immobilization; surface regeneration

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Year:  2020        PMID: 33289457     DOI: 10.1177/2472555220975358

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  SLAS Discov        ISSN: 2472-5552            Impact factor:   3.341


  1 in total

Review 1.  Scattering-based Light Microscopy: From Metal Nanoparticles to Single Proteins.

Authors:  Lee Priest; Jack S Peters; Philipp Kukura
Journal:  Chem Rev       Date:  2021-09-29       Impact factor: 60.622

  1 in total

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