Cell-free protein synthesis and assembly on a biochip

被引:0
|
作者
Yael Heyman
Amnon Buxboim
Sharon G. Wolf
Shirley S. Daube
Roy H. Bar-Ziv
机构
[1] The Weizmann Institute of Science,Department of Materials and Interfaces
[2] Chemical Research Support,undefined
[3] The Weizmann Institute of Science,undefined
[4] Present address: Department of Physics and Astronomy,undefined
[5] University of Pennsylvania,undefined
[6] Philadelphia,undefined
[7] Pennsylvania 19103,undefined
[8] USA,undefined
关键词
D O I
10.1038/nnano.2012.65
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Biologically active complexes such as ribosomes and bacteriophages are formed through the self-assembly of proteins and nucleic acids1,2. Recapitulating these biological self-assembly processes in a cell-free environment offers a way to develop synthetic biodevices3,4,5,6. To visualize and understand the assembly process, a platform is required that enables simultaneous synthesis, assembly and imaging at the nanoscale. Here, we show that a silicon dioxide grid, used to support samples in transmission electron microscopy, can be modified into a biochip to combine in situ protein synthesis, assembly and imaging. Light is used to pattern the biochip surface with genes that encode specific proteins, and antibody traps that bind and assemble the nascent proteins. Using transmission electron microscopy imaging we show that protein nanotubes synthesized on the biochip surface in the presence of antibody traps efficiently assembled on these traps, but pre-assembled nanotubes were not effectively captured. Moreover, synthesis of green fluorescent protein from its immobilized gene generated a gradient of captured proteins decreasing in concentration away from the gene source. This biochip could be used to create spatial patterns of proteins assembled on surfaces.
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页码:374 / 378
页数:4
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