Batalla Pilar, Fuentes Manuel, Mateo Cesar, Grazu Valeria, Fernandez-Lafuente Roberto, Guisan Jose M
Departamento de Biocatálisis, Instituto de Catálisis, CSIC, Campus UAM Cantoblanco, 28049 Madrid, Spain.
Biomacromolecules. 2008 Aug;9(8):2230-6. doi: 10.1021/bm8003594. Epub 2008 Jun 18.
The correct immobilization of antibodies is one of the most critical steps in the preparation of immunosensors and immunochromatography matrices. In addition, the final support has to be chemical and physically inert to avoid the unspecific adsorption of proteins that can reduce the sensitivity of the biosensor or the purification achieved by the chromatography. The solution to both problems is one of the major challenges in the field. Here, we have presented two different novel and simple alternatives to have the unmodified antibody anionically exchanged to a support, further covalently immobilized with more than 90% of the antibodies bonded to the support by the four subunits, retaining a high functionality and giving a final "inert" surface. The first solution was the use of supports having a low superficial density of amino groups activated with glutaraldehyde. Here, the inertness was achieved by the use of a very low density of amino groups, unable to adsorb proteins at 100 mM sodium phosphate, while immobilization proceeds mainly via a first adsorption of the antibody and a further reaction with the glutaraldehyde groups. The second solution implies the design of a novel support (amino-epoxy). This support again produces a first ionic exchange of the antibody on the support and a further reaction with the epoxy groups, but because the epoxy groups can be finally blocked with aspartic groups (annulling the charge), the initial density of amino-epoxy groups can be as high as possible. Both systems permitted the correct and oriented immobilization of IgG. The immobilized antibody showed high-functionality (65-75%) and a final inert support surface. This immobilized antibody (antiperoxidase) was able to capture fully specifically HRP contaminating a protein crude extract from E. coli.
抗体的正确固定是免疫传感器和免疫色谱基质制备中最关键的步骤之一。此外,最终载体必须在化学和物理上呈惰性,以避免蛋白质的非特异性吸附,这种吸附会降低生物传感器的灵敏度或色谱法所实现的纯化效果。解决这两个问题是该领域的主要挑战之一。在此,我们提出了两种不同的新颖且简单的方法,可将未修饰的抗体通过阴离子交换到载体上,进一步共价固定,超过90%的抗体通过四个亚基与载体结合,保持高功能性并形成最终的“惰性”表面。第一种方法是使用经戊二醛活化的具有低表面氨基密度的载体。在这里,通过使用非常低的氨基密度实现惰性,在100 mM磷酸钠条件下无法吸附蛋白质,而固定化主要通过抗体的首次吸附以及与戊二醛基团的进一步反应进行。第二种方法涉及设计一种新型载体(氨基 - 环氧)。这种载体同样使抗体在载体上首先进行离子交换,然后与环氧基团进一步反应,但由于环氧基团最终可用天冬氨酸基团封闭(消除电荷),氨基 - 环氧基团的初始密度可以尽可能高。两种系统都能实现IgG的正确且定向固定。固定化抗体显示出高功能性(65 - 75%)以及最终的惰性载体表面。这种固定化抗体(抗过氧化物酶)能够完全特异性地捕获来自大肠杆菌蛋白质粗提物中的HRP污染物。