University of Canterbury. Biomolecular Interaction Centre
Doi
Abstract
Gold nanoparticles decorated with full-length sialic acid terminated
complex bi-antennary N-glycans, synthesized with glycans
isolated from egg yolk, were used as a sensor for the detection
of both recombinant hemagglutinin (HA) and whole influenza
A virus particles of the H1N1 subtype. Nanoparticle aggregation
was induced by interaction between the sialic acid
termini of the glycans attached to gold and the multivalent
sialic acid binding sites of HA. Both dynamic light scattering (DLS) and UV/Vis spectroscopy demonstrated the efficiency of the sensor, which could detect viral HA at nanomolar concentrations
and revealed a linear relationship between the extent
of nanoparticle aggregation and the concentration of HA. UV/
Vis studies also showed that these nanoparticles can selectively
detect an influenza A virus strain that preferentially binds sialic
acid terminated glycans with a(2!6) linkages over a strain
that prefers glycans with terminal a(2!3)-linked sialic acids