Functional protein arrays can exploit the specificity of
protein-protein interactions for medical diagnosis. To this end
engineered arrays which present a surface composed of fully functional
folded proteins for interaction with molecules in solution have been
developed. To ‘sense’ the interaction, engineered membrane proteins are
anchored to gold surfaces for electronic, optical and acoustic detection
purposes. Proteins, for example IgG, are then reversibly bound to this
scaffold layer, to define the surface selectivity. Characterisation
of the scaffold array before and after the binding of three further
proteins has been carried out using the newly implemented technique of
magnetic contrast reflectivity on the Surf reflectometer. Enhanced
resolution has been achieved by the deuteration of the scaffold protein
and constrained fitting of datasets with variable mixtures of D2O and H2O.λ This
has provided a uniquely definitive structural characterisation of the
molecular structure. Optimisation of molecular orientation is critical
to device miniaturisation and allows more clinical tests per square
millimetre, reducing costs and increasing efficiency.
AP Le Brun, JH Lakey (University of Newcastle), DS Shah (Orla Protein Technologies Ltd), SA Holt (ISIS)
Research date: December 2008
Further Information
Prof JH Lakey, J.H.Lakey@ncl.ac.uk
A P Le Brun et al, Eur. Biophys. J. 37 (2008) 639–645.