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Journal of Biomolecular Screening
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Article

Label-Free High-Throughput Functional Lytic Assays

Shawn M. O'Malley*, Xinying Xie, Anthony G. Frutos

Corning Incorporated, Corning, NY.

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: omalleysm{at}corning.com.


   Abstract

Refractive index-sensitive resonant waveguide grating biosensors are used to assay the label-free enzymatic degradation of biomolecules. These assays provide a robust means of screening for functional lytic modulators. The biomolecular substrates in this study were covalently immobilized through amine groups. Using the Corning® EpicTM System, the digestion signatures for multiple protein substrates on the biosensors are measured. Label-free digestion profiles for these proteins were substrate specific. Similarly, the authors find that the label-free digestion is protease specific. Enzyme-substrate pairs were used to evaluate high-throughput biosensors as tools for screening functional modulators. The lytic inhibitor properties for several proteases and dextranase are determined. The authors find that the IC50 values for the protease inhibitors agree with the reported values for several known inhibitors. The Z' values, using biosensor-based functional lytic screens, were routinely greater than 0.5, making this label-free application feasible for high-throughput screening.

Key Words: label-free digestion, high-throughput screening, refractive index-sensitive biosensors, lytic assays

First published on December 14, 2006, doi:10.1177/1087057106296496

Journal of Biomolecular Screening 2007;12:117.

A more recent version of this article appeared on February 1, 2007


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