Mechanism of immobilized protein A binding to immunoglobulin G on nanosensor array surfaces.

2015 
Protein A is often used for the purification and detection of antibodies such as immunoglobulin G (IgG) because of its quadrivalent domains that bind to the Fc region of these macromolecules. However, the kinetics and thermodynamics of the binding to many sensor surfaces have eluded mechanistic description due to complexities associated with multivalent interactions. In this work, we use a near-infrared (nIR) fluorescent single-walled carbon nanotube sensor array to obtain the kinetics of IgG binding to protein A, immobilized using a chelated Cu2+/His-tag chemistry to hydrogel dispersed sensors. A bivalent binding mechanism is able to describe the concentration dependence of the effective dissociation constant, KD,eff, which varies from 100 pM to 1 μM for IgG concentrations from 1 ng mL–1 to 100 μg mL–1, respectively. The mechanism is shown to describe the unusual concentration-dependent scaling demonstrated by other sensor platforms in the literature as well, and a comparison is made between resulting pa...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    25
    References
    37
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []