e.g. Filippa Pettersson or Cancer Res. 75(6) , 1102-12, (2015) or 10.1002/anie.201600521
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics 2008-11-14
In situ monitoring of the orientated assembly of strep-tagged membrane proteins on the gold surface by surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy.
Xiue Jiang, Anne Zuber, Joachim Heberle, Kenichi Ataka
Surface enhanced infrared absorption spectroscopy (SEIRAS) has been employed to monitor the orientated assembly of a strep-tagged membrane protein on the gold surface via a streptavidin/biotin interlayer. The high surface sensitivity of SEIRAS allows for tracking the individual assembling steps on the molecular level. The sequence of surface modification steps comprises: (i) cross-linking of biotin to the self-assembled monolayer of cysteamine along the gold surface; (ii) adsorption of streptavidin to and desorption from the biotin layer; and (iii) adsorption of the strep-tagged membrane protein ecgltP (glutamate transporter of E. coli) on the streptavidin/biotin layer. The analysis of the SEIRA spectra reveals that the biotin layer undergoes a phase transition from an isotropic orientation to a densely packed layer during coupling to the cysteamine monolayer. Formation of the densely packed layer weakens the interaction between streptavidin and the biotin layer but yields a binding specificity of 80%. The specificity of strep-tagged ecgltP to the streptavidin layer is with 60% only modest. Nevertheless, the streptavidin/biotin interlayer reveals a higher regeneration propensity than the His-tag/Ni-NTA interlayer.