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Engineering of PDMS surfaces for use in microsystems for capture and isolation of complex and biomedically important proteins: epidermal growth factor receptor as a model system
- Source :
- Lab on a chip. 8(8)
- Publication Year :
- 2008
-
Abstract
- Elastomers based on poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) are promising materials for fabrication of a wide range of microanalytical systems due to their mechanical and optical properties and ease of processing. To date, however, quantitative studies that demonstrate reliable and reproducible methods for attachment of binding groups that capture complex receptor proteins of relevance to biomedical applications of PDMS microsystems have not been reported. Herein we describe methods that lead to the reproducible capture of a transmembrane protein, the human epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor, onto PDMS surfaces presenting covalently immobilized antibodies for EGF receptor, and subsequent isolation of the captured receptor by mechanical transfer of the receptor onto a chemically functionalized surface of a gold film for detection. This result is particularly significant because the physical properties of transmembrane proteins make this class of proteins a difficult one to analyze. We benchmark the performance of antibodies to the human EGF receptor covalently immobilized on PDMS against the performance of the same antibodies physisorbed to conventional surfaces utilized in ELISA assays through the use of EGF receptor that was 32P-radiolabeled in its autophosphorylation domain. These results reveal that two pan-reactive antibodies for the EGF receptor (clones H11 and 111.6) and one phosphospecific EGF receptor antibody (clone pY1068) capture the receptor on both PDMS and ELISA plates. When using H11 antibody to capture EGF receptor and subsequent treatment with a stripping buffer (NaOH and sodium dodecylsulfate) to isolate the receptor, the signal-to-background obtained using the PDMS surface was 82 : 1, exceeding the signal-to-background measured on the ELISA plate (
- Subjects :
- Surface Properties
Biomedical Engineering
Biomedical Technology
Bioengineering
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
Biochemistry
Models, Biological
Buffer (optical fiber)
Antibodies
Article
Humans
Epidermal growth factor receptor
Dimethylpolysiloxanes
Receptor
biology
Chemistry
Autophosphorylation
General Chemistry
Microfluidic Analytical Techniques
Molecular biology
Transmembrane protein
ErbB Receptors
Covalent bond
Biophysics
biology.protein
Antibody
Clone (B-cell biology)
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 14730197
- Volume :
- 8
- Issue :
- 8
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Lab on a chip
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b9ae81e9a9cb65066eb278b55137cca0