Knowledge-based design of reagentless fluorescent biosensors from recombinant antibodies.

J Mol Biol

Département de Biologie Structurale et Chimie, CNRS URA 2185, Institut Pasteur, 28 rue Docteur Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France.

Published: April 2002


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

The possibility of obtaining from any antibody a fluorescent conjugate which responds to the binding of the antigen by a variation of its fluorescence, would be of great interest in the analytical sciences and for the construction of protein chips. This possibility was explored with antibody mAbD1.3 directed against hen egg white lysozyme. Rules of design were developed to identify the residues of the antibody to which a fluorophore could be chemically coupled, after changing them to cysteine by mutagenesis. These rules were based on: the target residue belonging to a topological neighbourhood of the antigen in the structure of the complex between antibody and antigen; its absence of functional importance for the interaction with the antigen; and its solvent accessibility in the structure of the free antibody. Seventeen conjugates between the single-chain variable fragment scFv of mAbD1.3 and an environment-sensitive fluorophore were constructed. For six of the ten residues which fully satisfied the design rules, the relative variation of the fluorescence intensity between the free and bound states of the conjugate was comprised between 12 and 75% (in non-optimal buffer), and the affinity of the conjugate for lysozyme remained unchanged relative to the parental scFv. In contrast, such results were true for only one of the seven residues which failed to satisfy one of the rules and were used as controls. One of the conjugates was studied in more detail. Its fluorescence increased proportionally to the concentration of lysozyme in a nanomolar range, up to 90% in a defined buffer, and 40% in serum. This increase was specific for hen egg lysozyme and it was not observed with a closely related protein, turkey egg lysozyme. The residues which gave operational conjugates (six in V(L) and one in V(H)), were located in the immediate vicinity of residues which are functionally important, along the sequence of FvD1.3. The results suggest rules of design for constructing antigen-sensitive fluorescent conjugates from any antibody, in the absence of structural data.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0022-2836(02)00023-2DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

variation fluorescence
8
hen egg
8
rules design
8
egg lysozyme
8
antibody
6
lysozyme
5
rules
5
residues
5
knowledge-based design
4
design reagentless
4

Similar Publications

Microfluidics-assisted spatially barcoded microarray technology offers a high-throughput, low-cost approach towards spatial transcriptomic profiling. A uniform barcoded microarray is crucial for spatially unbiased mRNA analysis. However, non-specific adsorption of barcoding reagents in microchannels occurs during liquid transport, causing non-uniform barcoding in the chip's functional regions.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Toward universal immunofluorescence normalization for multiplex tissue imaging with UniFORM.

Cell Rep Methods

August 2025

Department of Biomedical Engineering and Computational Biology Program, OHSU, Portland, OR, USA; Knight Cancer Institute, OHSU, Portland, OR, USA. Electronic address:

We present UniFORM, a non-parametric, Python-based pipeline for normalizing multiplex tissue imaging (MTI) data at both the feature and pixel levels. UniFORM employs an automated rigid landmark registration method tailored to the distributional characteristics of MTI, with UniFORM operating without prior distributional assumptions and handling both unimodal and bimodal patterns. By aligning the biologically invariant negative populations, UniFORM removes technical variation while preserving tissue-specific expression patterns in positive populations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Rational design of tunable pH switches through shadow-strand hybridization-actuated displacement engineering.

Nucleic Acids Res

September 2025

Key Laboratory of Clinical Laboratory Diagnostics (Chinese Ministry of Education), College of Laboratory Medicine, Chongqing Medical University, Chongqing 400016, P. R. China.

Local pH variations play a pivotal role in numerous critical biological processes. However, achieving the tunability and selectivity of pH detection remains a challenge. Here, we present a DNA-based strategy that enables programmable and selective pH responses, which is termed shadow-strand hybridization-actuated displacement engineering (SHADE).

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Ionic Liquid Engineered Defect-Driven Green Emitting Zero-Dimensional CsPbBr Microdisks.

J Phys Chem Lett

September 2025

School of Chemical Sciences, National Institute of Science Education and Research (NISER), An OCC of Homi Bhabha National Institute Jatni, Khurda, Bhubaneswar 752050, Odisha, India.

Quantum-confined perovskites represent an emerging class of materials with great potential for optoelectronic applications. Specifically, zero-dimensional (0D) perovskites have garnered significant attention for their unique excitonic properties. However, achieving phase-pure, size-tunable 0D perovskite materials and gaining a clear understanding of their photophysical behavior remains challenging.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Subcellular distribution-based reference-free cancer cell discrimination with a novel AIE cationic probe.

Anal Chim Acta

November 2025

College of Chemistry and Molecular Sciences, Wuhan University, Wuhan, 430072, China. Electronic address:

Background: The development of specific fluorescent probes for cancer cell discrimination holds significant promise for advancing cancer diagnostics. Conventionally, these probes operate by translating differences in biomarkers or microenvironmental factors into variations in whole-cell fluorescence intensity. However, this dominant, intensity-based strategy is highly susceptible to extraneous fluctuations arising from probe concentration, illumination instability and complex intracellular environment.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF