Publication | Closed Access
Free-Solution, Label-Free Molecular Interactions Studied by Back-Scattering Interferometry
202
Citations
42
References
2007
Year
Immunocytochemical TechniqueMolecular BiologyBack-scattering InterferometryBioanalysisImmunochemistrySingle MoleculeMonoclonal AntibodyBiophysicsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryHigh SensitivityBiomolecular InteractionBiophotonicsSingle-molecule DetectionNatural SciencesProtein EngineeringCellular BiochemistryMedicineSmall Molecules
Free-solution, label-free molecular interactions were investigated with back-scattering interferometry in a simple optical train composed of a helium-neon laser, a microfluidic channel, and a position sensor. Molecular binding interactions between proteins, ions and protein, and small molecules and protein, were determined with high dynamic range dissociation constants (Kd spanning six decades) and unmatched sensitivity (picomolar Kd's and detection limits of 10,000s of molecules). With this technique, equilibrium dissociation constants were quantified for protein A and immunoglobulin G, interleukin-2 with its monoclonal antibody, and calmodulin with calcium ion Ca2+, a small molecule inhibitor, the protein calcineurin, and the M13 peptide. The high sensitivity of back-scattering interferometry and small volumes of microfluidics allowed the entire calmodulin assay to be performed with 200 picomoles of solute.
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