Abstract

Excessive sample vols. continue to be a major limitation in the anal. of protein-protein interactions, motivating the search for label-free detection methods of greater sensitivity. Herein, the authors report the first chem. approach for selective protein recognition using fluorescent single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) enabling label-free microarrays capable of single protein detection. Hexahistidine-tagged capture proteins directly expressed by cell-free synthesis on SWNT/chitosan microarray are bound to a Ni2+ chelated by Nα,Nα-bis(carboxymethyl)-L-lysine grafted to chitosan surrounding the SWNT. The Ni2+ acts as a proximity quencher with the Ni2+/SWNT distance altered upon docking of analyte proteins. This ability to discern single protein binding events decreases the apparent detection limit from 100 nM, for the ensemble av., to 10 pM for an observation time of 600 s. This first use of cell-free synthesis to functionalize a nanosensor extends this method to a virtually infinite no. of capture proteins. To demonstrate this, the SWNT microarrays are used to analyze a network of 1156 protein-protein interactions in the staurosporine-induced apoptosis of SH-SY5Y cells, confirming literature predictions. [on SciFinder(R)]

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