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    Anal Chem. 2009 Jan 29. [Epub ahead of print]

    Free-Solution Label-Free Detection of alpha-Crystallin Chaperone Interactions by Back-Scattering Interferometry.

    Latham JC, Stein RA, Bornhop DJ, McHaourab HS.

    Department of Chemistry and The Vanderbilt Institute for Chemical Biology, Vanderbilt University, VU Station B 351822, Nashville, Tennessee 37235-1822, and Department of Molecular Physiology and Biophysics, Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, 2215 Garland Ave., 741 Light Hall, Nashville, Tennessee 37232.

    We report the quantitative, label-free analysis of protein-protein interactions in free solution within picoliter volumes using backscatter interferometry (BSI). Changes in the refractive index are measured for solutions introduced on a PDMS microchip allowing determination of forward and reverse rate constants for two-mode binding. Time-dependent BSI traces are directly fit using a global analysis approach to characterize the interaction of the small heat-shock protein alpha-Crystallin with two substrates: destabilized mutants of T4 lysozyme and the in vivo target betaB1-Crystallin. The results recapitulate the selectivity of alphaB-Crystallin differentially binding T4L mutants according to their free energies of unfolding. Furthermore, we demonstrate that an alphaA-Crystallin mutant linked to hereditary cataract has activated binding to betaB1-Crystallin. Binding isotherms obtained from steady-state values of the BSI signal yielded meaningful dissociation constants and establishes BSI as a novel tool for the rapid identification of molecular partners using exceedingly small sample quantities under physiological conditions. This work demonstrates that BSI can be extended to screen libraries of disease-related mutants to quantify changes in affinity and/or kinetics of binding.

    PMID: 19178288 [PubMed - as supplied by publisher]

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