Bio-nanocapsules for oriented immobilization of DNA aptamers on aptasensors

Literature Information

Publication Date 2022-01-13
DOI 10.1039/D1AN02278D
Impact Factor 4.616
Authors

Hideo Nakano, Tsutomu Nakayama


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Abstract

The oriented immobilization of sensing molecules (e.g., IgGs, receptors, lectins, and DNA aptamers) on sensor chips is particularly important for maximizing the potential of the sensing molecules, thereby enhancing the sensitivity and target-binding capacity of biosensors. We previously developed ∼30 nm bio-nanocapsules (ZZ-BNCs) consisting of the hepatitis B virus envelope L protein fused with the tandem form of protein A-derived IgG Fc-binding Z domain (ZZ-L protein). ZZ-BNC acts successfully as a scaffold, enhancing both the sensitivity and binding capacity of IgG, a Fc-fused receptor, and Fc-fused lectin to antigens, cytokines, and sugar chains through an oriented immobilization on a biosensor surface. To expand the versatility of ZZ-BNC, we modified ZZ-BNC by replacing the ZZ domain with a DNA-binding single-chain lambda Cro (scCro) domain, thereby developing scCro-BNC. The scCro-BNC was synthesized in yeast cells and homogeneously purified as ∼30 nm sized nanoparticles. In a quartz crystal microbalance, an scCro-BNC-coated sensor chip immobilized with thrombin-binding DNA aptamers showed an ∼5.5-fold higher thrombin-binding capacity and ∼6000-fold higher detection sensitivity than a sensor chip directly coated with DNA aptamers. In addition, the number of bound thrombin molecules per molecule of DNA aptamer increased by ∼7.8-fold with an scCro-BNC coating, consistent with the theoretical thrombin-binding capacity. Collectively, scCro-BNC was shown to perform as an ideal scaffold for maximizing the potential of the DNA aptamer by immobilizing it in an oriented manner. Facilitating a highly sensitive detection of various target molecules, these BNC-based scaffolds are expected to improve a wide range of biosensors while minimizing the number of sensing molecules required.

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