This application claims the priority benefit of Taiwan application serial no. 109117564, filed on May 26, 2020. The entirety of the above-mentioned patent application is hereby incorporated by reference herein and made a part of this specification.
The disclosure relates to an irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing a glycoprotein, and in particular, to an irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing a glycoprotein suitable for a complex analyte sample.
An antibody may tightly and specifically bind to an epitope and therefore has been widely applied in biomedical technologies such as immunoaffinity separation, target treatment delivery, enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), and test arrays.
Nevertheless, antibody binding of an immobilized antibody is weak when the immobilized antibody is prepared through a conventional antibody cross-linking method, such as physical adsorption. Immobilization of antibody on the surface by random amide bond formation results in losing some of the antigen binding activity. Further, in a complex analyte sample (e.g., a blood sample), due to the presence of the alkaline substance, dissociation of antibody bound to the boronic acid may occur, and sensitivity of the subsequent antibody analysis is thus affected.
Based on the above, development of a method for immobilizing an antibody to resist dissociation, provide strong binding, and contribute to enhancement of detection sensitivity in a complex sample is an important issue.
The disclosure provides an irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing a glycoprotein through which an antibody may resist dissociation, provide strong binding, and contribute to enhancement of detection sensitivity in a complex sample.
An irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing a glycoprotein provided by the disclosure includes the following steps. An organic boronic acid and a photoaffinity reagent are provided to contact a surface of a solid support. The organic boronic acid is represented by R1—ArB(OH)2, —ArB(OH)2 is a boronic acid group, and R1 is a first cross-linking agent. The organic boronic acid is bound to the surface of the solid support through the first cross-linking agent R1, and the photoaffinity reagent is bound to the surface of the solid support through a second cross-linking agent R2. Next, a glycoprotein is provided to contact the organic boronic acid, and the glycoprotein includes an Fc fragment. An alcohol group on a sugar chain of the Fc fragment and the boronic acid group of the organic boronic acid form an organic boronate ester to immobilize the glycoprotein. UV light irradiation is then performed, so that the photoaffinity reagent and the glycoprotein form a covalent cross-link.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the photoaffinity reagent is a diazirine compound.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the solid support includes a nanoparticle.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the first cross-linking agent R1 is an organic linker containing an amine group at a terminal.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the second cross-linking agent R2 is an organic linker containing an amine group at a terminal.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the glycoprotein includes an antibody.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the glycoprotein includes an Fc-fusion glycoprotein including the Fc fragment.
In an embodiment of the disclosure, the irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing the glycoprotein is configured to detect an antigen in a blood sample.
To sum up, in the irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing the glycoprotein provided by the disclosure, the alcohol group on the sugar chain of the glycoprotein Fc fragment and the boronic acid group of the organic boronic acid form the organic boronate ester. UV light irradiation is further performed, so that the photoaffinity reagent and the glycoprotein form a covalent cross-link. In this way, the glycoprotein may exhibit dissociation resistance and strong binding and thereby contributes to enhancement of detection sensitivity and provides orientation in a complex sample (e.g., a blood sample).
To make the aforementioned more comprehensible, several embodiments accompanied with drawings are described in detail as follows.
The accompanying drawings are included to provide a further understanding of the disclosure, and are incorporated in and constitute a part of this specification. The drawings illustrate exemplary embodiments of the disclosure and, together with the description, serve to explain the principles of the disclosure.
The following describes the embodiments of the disclosure. Nevertheless, the embodiments are exemplary only, and the disclosure is not limited thereto.
In the specification, scopes represented by “a numerical value to another numerical value” are schematic representations in order to avoid listing all of the numerical values in the scopes in the specification. Therefore, the recitation of a specific numerical range covers any numerical value in the numerical range and a smaller numerical range defined by any numerical value in the numerical range, as is the case with any numerical value and a smaller numerical range thereof in the specification.
With reference to
The organic boronic acid is bound to the surface of the solid support through the first cross-linking agent R1 (in this embodiment, the solid support is, for example, the nanoparticle 10), and the first cross-linking agent R1 may be an organic linker containing an amine group at a terminal.
With reference to
In addition, the photoaffinity reagent 12 may also be represented by, for example, a chemical structure as follows:
Note that the chemical structure and the number of n of the photoaffinity reagent 12 are merely exemplary for illustration, and the disclosure is not limited thereto. The photoaffinity reagent 12 is bound to the surface of the solid support (e.g., the nanoparticle 10 in this embodiment) through a second cross-linking agent R2, and the second cross-linking agent R2 may be an organic linker containing an amine group at a terminal.
With reference to
X═Y═NH2, l=m=1;
X═Y═COOH, l=m=0;
X═NH2, Y═COOH, l=0, m=1 or l=1, m=0; and
X═COOH, Y═NH2, l=0, m=1 or l=1, m=0.
Note that the chemical structures and the definition of the parameters of the first cross-linking agent R1 and the second cross-linking agent R2 are exemplary only, and the disclosure is not limited thereto.
Next, with reference to
Next, with reference to
The irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing the glycoprotein provided by the foregoing embodiments are described in detail through experimental examples provided as follows. Nevertheless, the experimental examples below are not intended to limit the disclosure.
The experimental example is provided as follow so as to prove that the irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing the glycoprotein provided by the disclosure may be used to enhance binding of an antibody, and that sensitivity of an antibody analysis may be effectively improved.
Note that since the irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing the glycoprotein is described in detail in the foregoing paragraphs, details of the irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing the glycoprotein provided below are omitted to simplify the description.
In
In a fluorescence measurement result of a binding analysis (binding assay) in
In
In view of the foregoing, in the irreversible and covalent method for immobilizing the glycoprotein provided by the disclosure, the alcohol group on the sugar chain of the glycoprotein Fc fragment and the boronic acid group of the organic boronic acid form the organic boronate ester. UV light irradiation is further performed, so that the photoaffinity reagent and the glycoprotein form a covalent cross-link. In this way, oriented and irreversible binding may be formed between the nanoparticle and the glycoprotein, and high binding specificity is also provided. Therefore, in a complex sample (e.g., a blood sample), the glycoprotein may exhibit dissociation resistance and strong binding and thereby contributes to enhancement of detection sensitivity and provides orientation.
It will be apparent to those skilled in the art that various modifications and variations can be made to the disclosed embodiments without departing from the scope or spirit of the disclosure. In view of the foregoing, it is intended that the disclosure covers modifications and variations provided that they fall within the scope of the following claims and their equivalents.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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109117564 | May 2020 | TW | national |