Surface-independent and oriented immobilization of antibody via one-step polydopamine/protein G coating: application to influenza virus immunoassay

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Title
Surface-independent and oriented immobilization of antibody via one-step polydopamine/protein G coating: application to influenza virus immunoassay
Author(s)
Jeong Moon; Jihyun Byun; Hongki Kim; Jinyoung JeongEun-Kyung LimJuyeon Jung; S Cho; W K Cho; Taejoon Kang
Bibliographic Citation
Macromolecular Bioscience, vol. 19, no. 6, pp. 1800486-1800486
Publication Year
2019
Abstract
For the construction of high-performance biosensor, it is important to interface bioreceptors with the sensor surface densely and in the optimal orientation. Herein, a simple surface modification method that can optimally immobilize antibodies onto various kinds of surfaces is reported. For the surface modification, a mixture of polydopamine (PDA) and protein G was employed. PDA is a representative mussel-inspired polymer, and protein G is an immunoglobulin-binding protein that enables an antibody to have an optimal orientation. The surface characteristics of PDA/Protein G mixture-coated substrates are analyzed and the PDA/protein G ratio is optimized to maximize the antibody binding efficiency. Moreover, the antibody-immobilized substrates are applied to the detection of influenza viruses with the naked eye, providing a detection limit of 2.9 × 103 pfu mL-1. Importantly, the several substrates (glass, SiO2, Si, Al2O3, polyethylene terephthalate, polyethylene, polypropylene, and paper) can be modified by simple incubation with the mixture of PDA/protein G, and then the anti-influenza A H1N1 antibodies can be immobilized on the substrates successfully. Regardless of the substrate, the influenza viruses are detectable after the sandwich immunoreaction and silver enhancement procedure. It is anticipated that the developed PDA/protein G coating method will extend the range of applicable materials for biosensing.
Keyword
antibody immobilizationimmunoassaypolydopamineprotein Gsurface modification
ISSN
1616-5187
Publisher
Wiley
DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/mabi.201800486
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of Research on National Challenges > Environmental diseases research center > 1. Journal Articles
Division of Research on National Challenges > Bionanotechnology Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
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