A novel assay was developed for the simultaneous monitoring of quantum dots and their assembly and disassembly with PreScission protease using capillary electrophoresis with fluorescence detection. Quantum dots and PreScission protease were injected into a capillary sequentially, then mixed and assembled via a thioether bond upon coupling to glutathione S-transferase tag inside the capillary. The in-capillary assembly was influenced by the molar ratio and the time interval of injection. Furthermore, the simultaneous monitoring of quantum dots and their assembly with PreScission protease and glutathione induced disassembly was achieved by adjusting the sampling sequence and the time interval of injection. More importantly, the in-capillary assay could be also applied to the online detection of glutathione.
Herein, we have developed an in-capillary assay for simultaneous detection of the assembly and disassembly of the multivalent HA tag peptide and antibody. HA tag with hexahistidine at C terminus (YPYDVPDYAG4 H6 , termed YPYDH6 ) was conjugated with quantum dots (QDs) by metal-affinity force to form a multivalent HA tag (QD-YPYDH6 ). QD-YPYDH6 and monoclonal anti-HA antibody (anti-HA) were sequentially injected into the capillary. They were mixed and assembled inside the capillary. The reaction products were online discriminated and detected by fluorescence coupled capillary electrophoresis (CE-FL). For the in-capillary assay, the binding efficiency of the multivalent HA tag and antibody on was influenced by the molar ratio and injection time. Such novel assay could even give out the self-assembly kinetic constant of QDs and YPYDH6 as KD of 34.1 μM with n (binding cooperativeness) of 2.2 by Hill equation. More importantly, the simultaneous detection of the assembly and imidazole (Im) induced disassembly of the QD-YPYDH6 -anti-HA complex was achieved in a single in-capillary assay. Our study demonstrated a new method for the online detection of antigen-antibody interactions.
Herein, we report a technique for detecting the fast binding of antibody-peptide inside a capillary. Anti-HA was mixed and interacted with FAM-labeled HA tag (FAM-E4 ) inside the capillary. Fluorescence coupled capillary electrophoresis (CE-FL) was employed to measure and record the binding process. The efficiency of the antibody-peptide binding on in-capillary assays was found to be affected by the molar ratio. Furthermore, the stability of anti-HA-FAM-E4 complex was investigated as well. The results indicated that E4 YPYDVPDYA (E4) or TAMRA-E4 YPYDVPDYA (TAMRA-E4) had the same binding priorities with anti-HA. The addition of excess E4 or TAMRA-E4 could lead to partial dissociation of the complex and take a two-step mechanism including dissociation and association. This method can be applied to detect a wide range of biomolecular interactions.
Capillary electrophoresis with fluorescence detection was utilized to probe the self-assembly between cyanine group dye labeled tetrahistidine containing peptide and CdSe/ZnS quantum dots, inside the capillary. Quantum dots and cyanine group dye labeled tetrahistidine containing peptide were injected into the capillary one after the other and allowed to self-assemble. Their self-assembly resulted into a measurable Förster resonance energy transfer signal between quantum dots and cyanine group dye labeled tetrahistidine containing peptide. The Förster resonance energy transfer signal increased upon increasing the cyanine group dye labeled tetrahistidine containing peptide/quantum dot molar ratio and reached a plateau at the 32/1 molar ratio. Additionally, the Förster resonance energy transfer signal was also affected by the increment of the interval time of injection and the sampling time. Online ligand exchange experiments were used to assess, the potential of a monovalent ligand of imidazole and a hexavalent ligand peptide, to displace surface bound cyanine group dye labeled peptide ligands from the quantum dots surface. Under optimal conditions, a linear relationship between the integrated peak areas and hexavalent ligand peptide was obtained at a hexavalent ligand concentration range of 0-0.5 mM. Therefore, the present assay has the potential to be applied in the online ligands detection.
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