van der Merwe P A, Barclay A N
MRC Cellular Immunology Unit, Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford, UK.
Curr Opin Immunol. 1996 Apr;8(2):257-61. doi: 10.1016/s0952-7915(96)80065-3.
The molecular interactions that mediate cell adhesion are often very weak, making them difficult to study. However, real-time optical biosensors based on surface plasmon resonance (SPR) are greatly facilitating the biochemical analysis of these interactions. Analysis of the T cell surface molecule CD2 has shown that adhesion molecules can interact with very low affinities (Kd approximately 100 microM) and dissociate with half lives of approximately 0.2 seconds or less. SPR has been combined with site-directed mutagenesis to delineate the interacting surfaces of CD2 and its ligand, CD48, quantify the contribution of individual residues to the binding energy, and determine the binding orientation of these surfaces in the CD2-CD48 complex. Furthermore, SPR has been combined with in situ modification of carbohydrates on purified glycoproteins to analyze the binding specificity of lectins such as CD22. Researchers have discovered the potential pitfalls of SPR, which can lead to inaccurate affinity and kinetic measurements.
介导细胞黏附的分子相互作用通常非常微弱,这使得它们难以研究。然而,基于表面等离子体共振(SPR)的实时光学生物传感器极大地促进了对这些相互作用的生化分析。对T细胞表面分子CD2的分析表明,黏附分子可以以非常低的亲和力(解离常数Kd约为100微摩尔)相互作用,并且以约0.2秒或更短的半衰期解离。SPR已与定点诱变相结合,以描绘CD2及其配体CD48的相互作用表面,量化单个残基对结合能的贡献,并确定这些表面在CD2 - CD48复合物中的结合方向。此外,SPR已与纯化糖蛋白上碳水化合物的原位修饰相结合,以分析凝集素如CD22的结合特异性。研究人员已经发现了SPR的潜在缺陷,这可能导致亲和力和动力学测量不准确。