4.6 Article

Patterns in Dried Droplets to Detect Unfolded BSA

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 22, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s22031156

Keywords

patterns; dried droplets; folded proteins; unfolded proteins

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The study demonstrates that high concentrations of unfolded conformational BSA result in an eye-like pattern, while low concentrations lead to the formation of amorphous aggregates in dried droplets.
The morphological analysis of patterns in dried droplets has allowed the generation of efficient techniques for the detection of molecules of medical interest. However, the effectiveness of this method to reveal the coexistence of macromolecules of the same species, but different conformational states, is still unknown. To address this problem, we present an experimental study on pattern formation in dried droplets of bovine serum albumin (BSA), in folded and unfolded conformational states, in saline solution (NaCl). Folded proteins produce a well-defined coffee ring and crystal patterns all over the dry droplet. Depending on the NaCl concentration, the crystals can be small, large, elongated, entangled, or dense. Optical microscopy reveals that the relative concentration of unfolded proteins determines the morphological characteristics of deposits. At a low relative concentration of unfolded proteins (above 2%), small amorphous aggregates emerge in the deposits, while at high concentrations (above 16%), the eye-like pattern, a large aggregate surrounded by a uniform coating, is produced. The radial intensity profile, the mean pixel intensity, and the entropy make it possible to characterize the patterns in dried droplets. We prove that it is possible to achieve 100% accuracy in identifying 4% of unfolded BSA contained in a protein solution.

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