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Preactivation Crosslinking—An Efficient Method for the Oriented Immobilization of Antibodies

Crosslinking of proteins for their irreversible immobilization on surfaces is a proven and popular method. However, many protocols lead to random orientation and the formation of undefined or even inactive by-products. Most concepts to obtain a more targeted conjugation or immobilization requires th...

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Autores principales: Schroeder, Barbara, Le Xuan, Hoa, Völzke, Jule L., Weller, Michael G.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6632165/
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mps2020035
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author Schroeder, Barbara
Le Xuan, Hoa
Völzke, Jule L.
Weller, Michael G.
author_facet Schroeder, Barbara
Le Xuan, Hoa
Völzke, Jule L.
Weller, Michael G.
author_sort Schroeder, Barbara
collection PubMed
description Crosslinking of proteins for their irreversible immobilization on surfaces is a proven and popular method. However, many protocols lead to random orientation and the formation of undefined or even inactive by-products. Most concepts to obtain a more targeted conjugation or immobilization requires the recombinant modification of at least one binding partner, which is often impractical or prohibitively expensive. Here a novel method is presented, which is based on the chemical preactivation of Protein A or G with selected conventional crosslinkers. In a second step, the antibody is added, which is subsequently crosslinked in the Fc part. This leads to an oriented and covalent immobilization of the immunoglobulin with a very high yield. Protocols for Protein A and Protein G with murine and human IgG are presented. This method may be useful for the preparation of columns for affinity chromatography, immunoprecipitation, antibodies conjugated to magnetic particles, permanent and oriented immobilization of antibodies in biosensor systems, microarrays, microtitration plates or any other system, where the loss of antibodies needs to be avoided, and maximum binding capacity is desired. This method is directly applicable even to antibodies in crude cell culture supernatants, raw sera or protein-stabilized antibody preparations without any purification nor enrichment of the IgG. This new method delivered much higher signals as a traditional method and, hence, seems to be preferable in many applications.
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spelling pubmed-66321652019-08-19 Preactivation Crosslinking—An Efficient Method for the Oriented Immobilization of Antibodies Schroeder, Barbara Le Xuan, Hoa Völzke, Jule L. Weller, Michael G. Methods Protoc Benchmark Crosslinking of proteins for their irreversible immobilization on surfaces is a proven and popular method. However, many protocols lead to random orientation and the formation of undefined or even inactive by-products. Most concepts to obtain a more targeted conjugation or immobilization requires the recombinant modification of at least one binding partner, which is often impractical or prohibitively expensive. Here a novel method is presented, which is based on the chemical preactivation of Protein A or G with selected conventional crosslinkers. In a second step, the antibody is added, which is subsequently crosslinked in the Fc part. This leads to an oriented and covalent immobilization of the immunoglobulin with a very high yield. Protocols for Protein A and Protein G with murine and human IgG are presented. This method may be useful for the preparation of columns for affinity chromatography, immunoprecipitation, antibodies conjugated to magnetic particles, permanent and oriented immobilization of antibodies in biosensor systems, microarrays, microtitration plates or any other system, where the loss of antibodies needs to be avoided, and maximum binding capacity is desired. This method is directly applicable even to antibodies in crude cell culture supernatants, raw sera or protein-stabilized antibody preparations without any purification nor enrichment of the IgG. This new method delivered much higher signals as a traditional method and, hence, seems to be preferable in many applications. MDPI 2019-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6632165/ http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mps2020035 Text en © 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Benchmark
Schroeder, Barbara
Le Xuan, Hoa
Völzke, Jule L.
Weller, Michael G.
Preactivation Crosslinking—An Efficient Method for the Oriented Immobilization of Antibodies
title Preactivation Crosslinking—An Efficient Method for the Oriented Immobilization of Antibodies
title_full Preactivation Crosslinking—An Efficient Method for the Oriented Immobilization of Antibodies
title_fullStr Preactivation Crosslinking—An Efficient Method for the Oriented Immobilization of Antibodies
title_full_unstemmed Preactivation Crosslinking—An Efficient Method for the Oriented Immobilization of Antibodies
title_short Preactivation Crosslinking—An Efficient Method for the Oriented Immobilization of Antibodies
title_sort preactivation crosslinking—an efficient method for the oriented immobilization of antibodies
topic Benchmark
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6632165/
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/mps2020035
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