4.6 Article

Kinase Sensing Based on Protein Interactions at the Catalytic Site

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 28, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.202104227

Keywords

biosensing; electrochemical biosensing; kinase sensing; protein-protein interactions; surface chemistry

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [1628/18]
  2. Academia Sinica
  3. Hebrew University of Jerusalem joint research program in Nanoscience and Nanotechnology
  4. Minerva Center for Bio-Hybrid complex systems

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The role of kinases in regulating cellular processes makes them potential biomarkers for a variety of diseases. This study introduces a new type of electrochemical kinase biosensor that relies on protein-protein interactions rather than enzymatic reactions, allowing for a more selective detection of different types of enzymes. The sensor was demonstrated using ERK2 kinase and its substrate protein HDGF, showing high sensitivity in detecting ERK2 without the need for ATP.
The role kinases play in regulating cellular processes makes them potential biomarkers for detecting the onset and prognosis of various diseases, including many types of cancer. Current kinase biosensors, including electrochemical and radiometric methods, rely on sensing the ATP-dependant enzymatic phosphorylation reaction. Here we introduce a new type of interaction-based electrochemical kinase biosensor that does not require any chemical labelling or modification. The basis for sensing is the interactions between the catalytic site of the kinase and the phosphorylation site of its substrate rather than the phosphorylation reaction. We demonstrated this concept with the ERK2 kinase and its substrate protein HDGF, which is involved in lung cancer. A peptide monolayer derived from the HDGF phosphorylation site was adsorbed onto a gold electrode and was used to sense ERK2 without ATP. The sensitivity of the assay was down to 10 nM of ERK2, corresponding with the range of its cellular concentrations. Surface chemistry analysis confirmed that ERK2 was bound to the HDGF peptide monolayer. This increased the permeability of redox-active species through the monolayer and resulted in ERK2 electrochemical sensing. Since our detection approach is based on protein-protein interactions and not on the enzymatic reaction, it can be further utilized for more selective detection of different types of enzymes.

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