Publication | Open Access
Advances in Lectin Microarray Technology: Optimized Protocols for Piezoelectric Print Conditions
53
Citations
19
References
2013
Year
EngineeringBiomolecular ToolGlycobiologyMolecular BiologyBiofabricationPolysaccharideBiomedical EngineeringOptimized ProtocolsGlycoproteomicsBioanalysisAnalytical BiotechnologyMolecular DiagnosticsProteomicsMicroarray Data AnalysisGlycosylationProtein GlycosylationBiochemistryPiezoelectric PrinterBiomedical AnalysisAntibody ScreeningFunctional GenomicsBiomolecular ScienceBiomolecular EngineeringPiezoelectric Print ConditionsNatural SciencesBiotechnologyLectin Microarray TechnologyProtein EngineeringContact Microarray PrinterCarbohydrate-protein InteractionHigh-throughput Screening
Lectin microarray technology has been used to profile the glycosylation of a multitude of biological and clinical samples, leading to new clinical biomarkers and advances in glycobiology. Lectin microarrays, which include >90 plant lectins, recombinant lectins, and selected antibodies, are used to profile N-linked, O-linked, and glycolipid glycans. The specificity and depth of glycan profiling depends upon the carbohydrate-binding proteins arrayed. The current set targets mammalian carbohydrates including fucose, high mannose, branched and complex N-linked, α- and β-galactose and GalNAc, α-2,3- and α-2,6-sialic acid, LacNAc, and Lewis X epitopes. Previous protocols have described the use of a contact microarray printer for lectin microarray production. Here, an updated protocol that uses a non-contact, piezoelectric printer, which leads to increased lectin activity on the array, is presented. Optimization of print and sample hybridization conditions and methods of analysis are discussed.
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