TY - JOUR
T1 - Modular Nanoparticle Platform for Solution-Phase Optical Sensing of Protein-Protein Interactions
AU - Zhou, Jieying
AU - Ridderbeek, Korneel
AU - Zou, Peijian
AU - Naden, Aaron B.
AU - Gaussmann, Stefan
AU - Song, Fangyuan
AU - Falter-Braun, Pascal
AU - Kay, Euan R.
AU - Sattler, Michael
AU - Cui, Jian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Protein-protein interactions regulate essentially all cellular processes. Understanding these interactions, including the quantification of binding parameters, is crucial for unraveling the molecular mechanisms underlying cellular pathways and, ultimately, their roles in cellular physiology and pathology. Current methods for measuring protein-protein interactions in vitro generally require amino acid conjugation of fluorescent tags, complex instrumentation, large amounts of purified protein, or measurement at extended surfaces. Here, we present an elegant nanoparticle-based platform for the optical detection of protein-protein interactions in the solution phase. We synthesized gold-coated silver decahedral nanoparticles possessing high chemical stability and exceptional optical sensing properties. The nanoparticle surface is then tailored for specific binding to commonly used polyhistidine tags of recombinant proteins. Sequential addition of proteins to the nanoparticle suspension results in spectral shifts of the localized surface plasmon resonance that can be monitored by conventional UV-vis spectrophotometry. With this approach, we demonstrate both the qualitative detection of specific protein-protein interactions and the quantification of equilibrium and kinetic binding parameters between small globular proteins. Requiring minimal protein quantities and basic laboratory equipment, this technique offers a simple, economical, and modular approach to characterizing protein-protein interactions, holds promise for broad use in future studies, and may serve as a template for future biosensing technologies.
AB - Protein-protein interactions regulate essentially all cellular processes. Understanding these interactions, including the quantification of binding parameters, is crucial for unraveling the molecular mechanisms underlying cellular pathways and, ultimately, their roles in cellular physiology and pathology. Current methods for measuring protein-protein interactions in vitro generally require amino acid conjugation of fluorescent tags, complex instrumentation, large amounts of purified protein, or measurement at extended surfaces. Here, we present an elegant nanoparticle-based platform for the optical detection of protein-protein interactions in the solution phase. We synthesized gold-coated silver decahedral nanoparticles possessing high chemical stability and exceptional optical sensing properties. The nanoparticle surface is then tailored for specific binding to commonly used polyhistidine tags of recombinant proteins. Sequential addition of proteins to the nanoparticle suspension results in spectral shifts of the localized surface plasmon resonance that can be monitored by conventional UV-vis spectrophotometry. With this approach, we demonstrate both the qualitative detection of specific protein-protein interactions and the quantification of equilibrium and kinetic binding parameters between small globular proteins. Requiring minimal protein quantities and basic laboratory equipment, this technique offers a simple, economical, and modular approach to characterizing protein-protein interactions, holds promise for broad use in future studies, and may serve as a template for future biosensing technologies.
KW - binding constant
KW - binding kinetics
KW - localized surface plasmon resonance
KW - optical biosensing
KW - plasmonic nanoparticles
KW - protein−protein interactions
KW - solution-phase sensing
KW - surface functionalization
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=86000769666&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/acsaom.4c00486
DO - 10.1021/acsaom.4c00486
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:86000769666
SN - 2771-9855
JO - ACS Applied Optical Materials
JF - ACS Applied Optical Materials
ER -