Antibody immobilization using heterobifunctional crosslinkers.

L C Shriver-Lake, B Donner, R Edelstein, K Breslin, S K Bhatia, F S Ligler
Author Information
  1. L C Shriver-Lake: Center for Bio/Molecular Science and Engineering, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington, DC 20375-5348, USA.

Abstract

Covalent attachment of functional proteins to a solid support is important for biosensors. One method employs thiol-terminal silanes and heterobifunctional crosslinkers such as N-succinimidyl 4-maleimidobutyrate (GMBS) to immobilize proteins through amino groups onto glass, silica, silicon or platinum surfaces. In this report, several heterobifunctional crosslinkers are compared to GMBS for their ability to immobilize active antibodies onto glass cover slips at a high density. Antibodies were immobilized at densities of 74-220 ng/cm2 with high levels of specific antigen binding. Carbohydrate-reactive crosslinkers were also compared to GMBS using a fiber optic biosensor to detect fluorescently-labeled antigen. At the concentrations tested, the antibodies immobilized with carbohydrate-reactive crosslinkers bound more antigen than GMBS immobilized antibodies as indicated by the fluorescence signal.

MeSH Term

Biosensing Techniques
Cross-Linking Reagents
Fiber Optic Technology
Glass
Immunoglobulin G
Optical Fibers
Succinimides

Chemicals

Cross-Linking Reagents
Immunoglobulin G
Succinimides
N-(gamma-maleimidobutyryloxy)succinimide

Word Cloud

Similar Articles

Cited By