A method for fast and simple covalent immobilization of proteins to a carboxymethyldextran-modified gold surface intended for surface plasmon resonance sensors is described. The method utilizes the formation of N-hydroxysuccinimide esters from a fraction of the carboxyl groups of the carboxymethylde
A Method of Reversible Biomolecular Immobilization for the Surface Plasmon Resonance Quantitative Analysis of Interacting Biological Macromolecules
✍ Scribed by Marı́a J. Benı́tez; Juan S. Jiménez
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2002
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 104 KB
- Volume
- 302
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0003-2697
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✦ Synopsis
This article presents a new procedure for the immobilization of macromolecules on gold surfaces, with the purpose of studying macromolecular interactions by simple optical configurations rendering surface plasmon resonance. Gold surfaces were covered by a three-layer structure composed of poly-L-lysine irreversibly bound to gold, followed by a second layer of heparin and a third layer of polylysine. The threelayer structure of polylysine-heparin-polylysine remains irreversibly bound to gold, it prevents biomolecules from coming into direct contact with the metal surface, and it allows the irreversible binding of different proteins and polynucleotides. After binding of a macromolecule to the three-layer structure, the interaction with a second macromolecule can be studied, and then the complex formed by the two interacting macromolecules, together with the second heparin layer and the third polylysine layer, can be broken down just by treatment with an alkaline solution having a pH value above the pK value of the amino groups of polylysine. The first polylysine layer remains irreversibly bound to gold, ready to form a new threelayer structure and, therefore, to support a new macromolecular interaction on the same regenerated surface. Polynucleotide interactions, the proteolytic action of chymotrypsin, and the interaction between the component subunits of a heterotetrameric enzyme are described as examples of macromolecular interactions studied by using this system. The method may be especially suitable for developing of low-cost systems aimed to look for surface resonance signals, and it offers the advantage of allowing calculation of param-eters related to the size and stoichiometry of the interacting macromolecules, in addition to the kinetic and equilibrium properties of the interaction.
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