A Three-Arm
Scaffold Carrying Affinity Molecules for Multiplex Recognition Imaging
by Atomic Force Microscopy: The Synthesis, Attachment to Silicon Tips,
and Detection of Proteins
- Publication date
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Abstract
We have developed a multiplex imaging
method for detection of proteins using atomic force microscopy (AFM),
which we call multiplex recognition imaging (mRI). AFM has been harnessed
to identify protein using a tip functionalized with an affinity molecule
at a single molecule level. However, many events in biochemistry require
identification of colocated factors simultaneously, and this is not
possible with only one type of affinity molecule on an AFM tip. To
enable AFM detection of multiple analytes, we designed a recognition
head made from conjugating two different affinity molecules to a three-arm
linker. When it is attached to an AFM tip, the recognition head would
allow the affinity molecules to function in concert. In the present
study, we synthesized two recognition heads: one was composed of two
nucleic acid aptamers, and the other one composed of an aptamer and
a cyclic peptide. They were attached to AFM tips through a catalyst-free
click reaction. Our imaging results show that each affinity unit in
the recognition head can recognize its respective cognate in an AFM
scanning process independently and specifically. The AFM method was
sensitive, only requiring 2 to 3 μL of protein solution with
a concentration of ∼2 ng/mL for the detection with our current
setup. When a mixed sample was deposited on a surface, the ratio of
proteins could be determined by counting numbers of the analytes.
Thus, this mRI approach has the potential to be used as a label-free
system for detection of low-abundance protein biomarkers