4.7 Article

High Density Diffusion-Free Nanowell Arrays

Journal

JOURNAL OF PROTEOME RESEARCH
Volume 11, Issue 8, Pages 4382-4391

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/pr300467q

Keywords

nanowells; protein microarrays; NAPPA; piezoelectric printing; high density arrays; functional proteins; in situ synthesis; proteome on chip; silicon microwells; diffusion-free

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [5R42RR031446-01]
  2. Early Detection Research Network [5U01CA117374]

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Proteomics aspires to elucidate the functions of all proteins. Protein microarrays provide an important step by enabling high-throughput studies of displayed proteins. However, many functional assays of proteins include untethered intermediates or products, which could frustrate the use of planar arrays at very high densities because of diffusion to neighboring features. The nucleic acid programmable protein array (NAPPA) is a robust in situ synthesis method for producing functional proteins just-in-time, which includes steps with diffusible intermediates. We determined that diffusion of expressed proteins led to cross-binding at neighboring spots at very high densities with reduced interspot spacing. To address this limitation, we have developed an innovative platform using photolithographically etched discrete silicon nanowells and used NAPPA as a test case. This arrested protein diffusion and cross-binding. We present confined high density protein expression and display, as well as functional protein protein interactions, in 8000 nanowell arrays. This is the highest density of individual proteins in nanovessels demonstrated on a single slide. We further present proof of principle results on ultrahigh density protein arrays capable of up to 24000 nanowells on a single slide.

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