4.8 Article

Cantilever Array Sensors Detect Specific Carbohydrate-Protein Interactions with Picomolar Sensitivity

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 5, Issue 5, Pages 3670-3678

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn103626q

Keywords

cantilever array sensors; glycomics; nanomechanics; biosensors; cyanovirin-N

Funding

  1. ERA
  2. NCCR-Nanoscale Science
  3. Center for Nano Science (CeNS)
  4. excellence cluster Nanosystems Initiative Munich (NIM)
  5. elite network of Bavaria
  6. Walther-Meissner-Institute
  7. Bavarian Academy of Science and Humanities
  8. ETH Zurich
  9. Swiss National Fonds (SNF)
  10. Max-Planck-Society
  11. [NRP47]

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Advances in carbohydrate sequencing technologies have revealed the tremendous complexity of the glycome. This complexity reflects the structural and chemical diversity of carbohydrates and is greater than that of proteins and oligonucleotides. The next step in understanding the biological function of carbohydrates requires the identification and quantification of carbohydrate interactions with other biomolecules, in particular, with proteins. To this end, we have developed a cantilever array biosensor with a self-assembling carbohydrate-based sensing layer that selectively and sensitively detects carbohydrate protein binding interactions. Specifically, we examined binding of mannosides and the protein cyanovirin-N, which binds and blocks the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV). Cyanovirin-N binding to immobilized oligomannosides on the cantilever resulted In mechanical surface stress that Is transduced into a mechanical force and cantilever bending. The degree and duration of cantilever deflection correlates with the interaction's strength, and comparative binding experiments reveal molecular binding preferences. This study establishes that carbohydrate-based cantilever biosensors are a robust, label-free, and scalable means to analyze carbohydrate-protein interactions and to detect picomolar concentrations of carbohydrate-binding proteins.

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