[Home]
[Full version]
Researchers 'hammer' proteins
Apr 17 ,General Science
A team of chemists, led by an ASU professor, has come up with an elegant method for cutting proteins into more manageable pieces for analysis. The method, which uses industrial fillers commonly found in paint and light, could significantly aid the development of bioanalysis tools that identify human remains – and might aid ushering in the age of personalized medicine.
A prototype sample preparation method uses ultraviolet light and titanium dioxide to cut proteins. It could be ideal for field devices and new microfluidic lab-on-chip devices designed to rapidly analyze minute amounts of biological samples. The method was detailed in the article “Cleavage of Peptides and Proteins Using Light Generated Radicals from Titanium Dioxide,” in a recent issue of Analytical Chemistry.
Proteins are relatively large and complex molecules made up of hundreds of thousands of amino acids. Cutting them into smaller sections allows researchers to work with more manageable pieces for analysis.
Currently, cutting proteins is achieved by using special enzymes called proteases that sever the chains of proteins at well-known locations. The protease trypsin, for example, cuts proteins at the locations of the amino acids lysine and arginine. Analyzing the residual fragments can identify the original protein.
But enzymes are finicky, requiring tight control of temperature and acidity, and the process of enzymatic digestion can be time-consuming, lasting from a matter of hours to days.
The new work was led by Mark Hayes, an ASU associate professor of chemistry and biochemistry. Researchers working with Hayes include his former student, Barbara Jones, and Matthew Vergne, David Bunk and Laurie Locascio, all of the National Institutes of Standards and Technology. Titanium dioxide is commonly used in paint as a white pigment, but it also is a photocatalyst, so when it is exposed to ultraviolet light its surface becomes highly oxidizing, converting nearby water molecules into hydroxyl radicals – a short-lived, highly reactive chemical species.
“We are basically taking semiconductor phenomena and semiconductor materials and getting elegant specificity in biochemical applications,” Hayes says. “It shouldn't happen, but it did.”
In the experiments, titanium dioxide coatings were applied to a variety of typical microanalysis devices, including microfluidic channels and silica beads in a microflow reactor. By shining strong UV light on the area, the presence of a protein solution creates a small cleavage zone of hydroxyl radicals that cut nearby proteins at the locations of the amino acid proline.
The result surprised the team.
“The hydroxyl free radical is one of the most reactive species known,” Hayes says. “It wanders around desperately trying to steal electrons from anything. To find specificity and having things break at this proline residue was just a stunning result.
“From a chemist's or biochemist's point of view, we never would have predicted it. People who are trying to break up peptides and proteins work very hard at getting specificity, and that is why the enzymes they use are so valuable – because they provide an exact cleavage location. We are basically hitting these poor things with a hammer.”
The titanium oxide technique offers several advantages over enzyme cleavage of proteins. It's not too sensitive to temperature or acidity, like enzymes are, and it needs no additional reagents other than dissolved oxygen in the solution. It is a simple arrangement, Hayes adds, easy to incorporate into a wide range of instruments and devices, and titanium dioxide will last virtually forever in a wide range of conditions.
Enzymes, however, have to be treated carefully and stored in temperature-controlled conditions.
The target amino acid proline is relatively sparse in most proteins but it's found at key locations such as sharp turns in the molecule that aid analysis. It's also fast. In tests with the protein angiotensin I, the researchers detected cleavage patterns in as little as 10 seconds.
Hayes said the team now will focus on determining the exact mechanism that allows it to cut proteins with high specificity. He adds that the process could lead to a wider range of devices to incorporate protein analysis in their operation.
“This development will help lead to more robust analysis systems,” he says. “The method could lead to field portable devices that can be used in military applications and for homeland defense purposes. In health care, it could lead to personalized medicine based on biological fingerprinting, where each person has a molecular ‘fingerprint' associated with their health state.”
Source: ASU
Related stories:
Titanium dioxide -- It slices, it dices ...
Chemists from the National Institute of Standards and Technology and Arizona State University have proposed an elegantly simple technique for cleaving proteins into convenient pieces for analysis. The prototype sample preparation method, detailed recently in
Analytical Chemistry, uses ultraviolet light and titanium dioxide and could be ideal for new microfluidic “lab-on-a-chip” devices designed to rapidly analyze minute amount of biological samples.
Nano-interfaces with cells
Coatings made with titanium and peppered with pores only nanometers or billionths of a meter wide could help interface living cells with electronics for prosthetics and other advanced devices, experts told UPI's Nano World.
'Nano-bumps' could help repair clogged blood vessels
Biomedical engineers at Purdue University have shown that "vascular stents" used to repair arteries might perform better if their surfaces contained "nano-bumps" that mimic tiny features found in living tissues.
The researchers already have shown in a series of experiments that bone and cartilage cells in petri dishes attach better to materials that possess smaller surface bumps than are found on conventional materials used to make artificial joints. The smaller features also stimulate the growth of more new bone tissue, which is critical for the proper attachment of artificial joints once they are implanted.
Research Reveals How Materials Direct Cell Response
New Georgia Tech research indicates how cells “sense” differences in biomaterial surface chemistry. The findings explain how biomaterials influence cells and could be used to develop new classes of materials to improve device integration and function.
Nanotechnology's miniature answers to developing world's biggest problems
In a study by the University of Toronto Joint Centre for Bioethics, a panel of international experts ranks the 10 nanotechnology applications in development worldwide with the greatest potential to aid the poor. With a high degree of unanimity, the 63 panelists selected energy production, conversion and storage, along with creation of alternative fuels, as the area where nanotechnology applications are most likely to benefit developing countries.
Models of Eel Cells Suggest Electrifying Possibilities
(PhysOrg.com) -- Engineers long have known that great ideas can be lifted from Mother Nature, but a new paper by researchers at Yale University and the National Institute of Standards and Technology takes it to a cellular level. Applying modern engineering design tools to one of the basic units of life, they argue that artificial cells could be built that not only replicate the electrical behavior of electric eel cells but in fact improve on them. Artificial versions of the eel’s electricity generating cells could be developed as a power source for medical implants and other tiny devices, they say.
New study on properties of carbon nanotubes, water could have wide-ranging implications
A fresh discovery about the way water behaves inside carbon nanotubes could have implications in fields ranging from the function of ultra-tiny high-tech devices to scientists' understanding of biological processes, according to researchers from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
When particles are so small that they seep right through skin
Scientists are finding that particles that are barely there – tiny objects known as nanoparticles that have found a home in electronics, food containers, sunscreens, and a variety of applications – can breech our most personal protective barrier: The skin.
[Home]
[Full version]