화학공학소재연구정보센터
Advanced Functional Materials, Vol.21, No.21, 4101-4108, 2011
A Mussel Adhesive Protein Fused with the BC Domain of Protein A is a Functional Linker Material that Efficiently Immobilizes Antibodies onto Diverse Surfaces
The efficient immobilization of antibodies onto solid surfaces is vital for the sensitivity and specificity of various immunoassays and immunosensors. A novel linker protein, BC-MAP, is designed and produced in Escherichia coli by genetically fusing mussel adhesive protein (MAP) with two domains (B and C) of protein A (antibody-binding protein) for efficient antibody immobilization on diverse surfaces. Through direct surface-coating analyses, it is found that BC-MAP successfully coats diverse surfaces including glass, polymers, and metals, but the BC domain alone does not. Importantly, antibodies are efficiently immobilized on BC-MAP-coated surfaces, and the immobilized antibodies interact selectively with their corresponding antigen. Quartz-crystal-microbalance analyses show that BC-MAP has excellent antibody-binding ability compared to that of BC protein on gold surfaces. These results demonstrate that the MAP domain, with uniquely strong underwater adhesive properties, plays a role in the direct and efficient coating of BC-MAP molecules onto diverse surfaces that lack additional surface treatment, and the BC domain of BC-MAP contributes to the selective and oriented immobilization of antibodies on BC-MAP-coated surfaces. Thus, the BC-MAP fusion protein could be a valuable novel linker material for the facile and efficient immobilization of antibodies onto diverse solid supports.