4.7 Article

Simultaneous evaluation of multiple microarray surface chemistries through real-time interferometric imaging

Journal

ANALYTICAL AND BIOANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 412, Issue 14, Pages 3477-3487

Publisher

SPRINGER HEIDELBERG
DOI: 10.1007/s00216-019-02276-1

Keywords

IRIS; Interferometric reflectance imaging sensor; Functional polymers; Localized surface functionalization; Microarray; Binding kinetics

Funding

  1. Regione Lombardia, project AMANDA (Abnormal Metabolic states, cellular stressors and NeuroDegenerative processes)

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Surface chemistry is a crucial aspect for microarray modality biosensor development. The immobilization capability of the functionalized surface is indeed a limiting factor for the final yield of the binding reaction. In this work, we were able to simultaneously compare the functionality of protein ligands that were locally immobilized on different polymers, while on the same solid support, therefore demonstrating a new way of multiplexing. Our goal was to investigate, in a single experiment, both the immobilization efficiency of a group of reactive polymers and the resulting affinity of the tethered molecules. This idea was demonstrated by spotting many reactive polymers on a Si/SiO2 chip and depositing the molecular probes on the spots immediately after. As a proof of concept, we focused on which polymers would better immobilize a model protein (alpha-Lactalbumin) and a peptide (LAC-1). We successfully showed that this protocol is applicable to proteins and peptides with a good efficiency. By means of real-time binding measurements performed with the interferometric reflectance imaging sensor (IRIS), local functionalization proved to be comparable to the classical flat coating solution. The final outcome highlights the multiplexing power of this method: first, it allows to characterize dozens of polymers at once. Secondly, it removes the limitation, related to coated surfaces, that only molecules with the same functional groups can be tethered to the same solid support. By applying this protocol, many types of molecules can be studied simultaneously and immobilization for each probe can be individually optimized.

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