63 research outputs found
Ferritin immobilization on patterned poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) brushes on silicon surfaces from colloid system
In this paper, we describe a graft polymerization/solvent immersion method for generating poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (PHEMA) brushes in various patterns. We used a novel fabrication process, involving very-large-scale integration and oxygen plasma treatment, to generate well-defined patterns of polymerized PHEMA on patterned Si(100) surfaces. We observed brush- and mushroom-like regions for the PHEMA brushes, with various pattern resolutions, after immersing wafers presenting lines of these polymers in MeOH and n-hexane, respectively. The interaction between PHEMA and ferritin protein sheaths in MeOH and n-hexane (good and poor solvent for PHEMA, respectively) was used to capture and release ferritins from fluidic system. The âtentaclesâ behaver for PHEMA brushes was found through various solvents in fluidic system. Using high-resolution scanning electron microscopy, we observed patterned ferritin Fe cores on the Si surface after pyrolysis of the patterned PHEMA brushes and ferritin protein sheaths, which verify the âtentaclesâ behaver for PHEMA brushes
HyClear : A Novel Tissue Clearing Solution for One-Step Clearing of Microtissues
3-D cell cultures are being increasingly used as in vitro models are capable of better mimicry of in vivo tissues, particularly in drug screenings where mass transfer limitations can affect the cancer biology and response to drugs. Three-dimensional microscopy techniques, such as confocal and multiphoton microscopy, have been used to elucidate data from 3-D cell cultures and whole organs, but their reach inside the 3-D tissues is restrained by the light scattering of the tissues, limiting their effective reach to 100â200 ”m, which is simply not enough. Tissue clearing protocols, developed mostly for larger specimens usually involve multiple steps of viscous liquid submersion, and are not easily adaptable for much smaller spheroids and organoids. In this work, we have developed a novel tissue clearing solution tailored for small spheroids and organoids. Our tissue clearing protocol, called HyClear, uses a mixture of DMSO, HPG and urea to allow for one-step tissue clearing of spheroids and organoids, and is compatible with high-throughput screening studies due to its speed and simplicity. We have shown that our tissue clearing agent is superior to many of the commonly used tissue clearing agents and allows for elucidating better quality data from drug screening experiments.Applied Science, Faculty ofMedicine, Faculty ofScience, Faculty ofBiomedical Engineering, School ofChemistry, Department ofElectrical and Computer Engineering, Department ofPathology and Laboratory Medicine, Department ofReviewedFacultyGraduat
Global Profiling of Proteolysis from the Mitochondrial Amino Terminome during Early Intrinsic Apoptosis Prior to Caspase-3 Activation
The
human genome encodes âŒ20 mitochondrial proteases, yet we know little of
how they sculpt the mitochondrial proteome, particularly during important
mitochondrial events such as the initiation of apoptosis. To characterize
global mitochondrial proteolysis we refined our technique, terminal
amine isotopic labeling of substrates, for mitochondrial SILAC (MS-TAILS)
to identify proteolysis across mitochondria and parent cells in parallel.
Our MS-TAILS analyses identified 45% of the mitochondrial proteome
and identified protein amino (N)-termini from 26% of mitochondrial
proteins, the highest reported coverage of the human mitochondrial
N-terminome. MS-TAILS revealed 97 previously unknown proteolytic sites.
MS-TAILS also identified mitochondrial targeting sequence (MTS) removal
by proteolysis during protein import, confirming 101 MTS sites and
identifying 135 new MTS sites, revealing a wobbly requirement for
the MTS cleavage motif. To examine the relatively unknown initial
cleavage events occurring before the well-studied activation of caspase-3
in intrinsic apoptosis, we quantitatively compared N-terminomes of
mitochondria and their parent cells before and after initiation of
apoptosis at very early time points. By identifying altered levels
of >400 N-termini, MS-TAILS analyses implicated specific mitochondrial
pathways including protein import, fission, and iron homeostasis in
apoptosis initiation. Notably, both staurosporine and Bax activator
molecule-7 triggered in common 7 mitochondrial and 85 cellular cleavage
events that are potentially part of an essential core of apoptosis-initiating
events. All mass spectrometry proteomics data have been deposited
to the ProteomeXchange Consortium with the dataset identifier PXD009054
Identifying and quantifying proteolytic events and the natural N terminome by terminal amine isotopic labeling of substrates
Analysis of the sequence and nature of protein N termini has many applications. Defining the termini of proteins for proteome annotation in the Human Proteome Project is of increasing importance. Terminomics analysis of protease cleavage sites in degradomics for substrate discovery is a key new application. Here we describe the step-by-step procedures for performing terminal amine isotopic labeling of substrates (TAILS), a 2- to 3-d (depending on method of labeling) high-throughput method to identify and distinguish protease-generated neo-N termini from mature protein N termini with all natural modifications with high confidence. TAILS uses negative selection to enrich for all N-terminal peptides and uses primary amine labeling-based quantification as the discriminating factor. Labeling is versatile and suited to many applications, including biochemical and cell culture analyses in vitro; in vivo analyses using tissue samples from animal and human sources can also be readily performed. At the protein level, N-terminal and lysine amines are blocked by dimethylation (formaldehyde/sodium cyanoborohydride) and isotopically labeled by incorporating heavy and light dimethylation reagents or stable isotope labeling with amino acids in cell culture labels. Alternatively, easy multiplex sample analysis can be achieved using amine blocking and labeling with isobaric tags for relative and absolute quantification, also known as iTRAQ. After tryptic digestion, N-terminal peptide separation is achieved using a high-molecular-weight dendritic polyglycerol aldehyde polymer that binds internal tryptic and C-terminal peptides that now have N-terminal alpha amines. The unbound naturally blocked (acetylation, cyclization, methylation and so on) or labeled mature N-terminal and neo-N-terminal peptides are recovered by ultrafiltration and analyzed by tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS). Hierarchical substrate winnowing discriminates substrates from the background proteolysis products and non-cleaved proteins by peptide isotope quantification and bioinformatics search criteria. © 2011 Nature America, Inc. All rights reserved
Modulation of Complement Activation and Amplification on Nanoparticle Surfaces by Glycopolymer Conformation and Chemistry
The complement system plays an integral part of a hostâs innate immunity, and its activation is highly dependent on the chemistry and structure of a âforeignâ target surface. We determined that the conformational state of glycopolymer chains, defined by the grafting density (chains/nm<sup>2</sup>), on the nanoparticle (NP) surface acts as a âmolecular switchâ for complement activation and amplification, and the protein corona on the NP surface dictates this process. A grafting density threshold was determined, below which minimal complement activation was observed and above which substantial complement activation was detected. The glycopolymer-grafted NPs activated complement <i>via</i> the alternative pathway. The chemical structure of pendent sugar units on the grafted polymer was also an important determinant for complement activation. NPs grafted with glucose-containing polymer activated complement at a lower grafting density compared to NPs grafted with galactose-containing polymer. Analysis of complement activation products C3a and SC5b-9 followed a similar pattern. Complement activation on the NP surface was independent of particle size or concentration for a given conformational state of grafted polymer. To gain insight into a putative surface-dependent mechanism of complement activation, we determined the nature of adsorbed protein corona on various NPs through quantitative mass spectrometry. Elevated levels of two pro-complement proteins, factors B and C3, present on the NP surface grafted with glycopolymer chains at high grafting density compared to low grafting density surface, may be responsible for its complement activity. Galactose polymer modified NPs adsorbed more of the negative regulator of complement, factor H, than the glucose surface, providing an explanation for its lower level of complement activation
Effect of polymer brush architecture on antibiofouling properties
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