Transduction of Glycan-Lectin Binding using Near Infrared Fluorescent Single Walled Carbon Nanotubes for Glycan Profiling

ORAL

Abstract

In this work, we demonstrate a sensor array employing recombinant lectins as glycan recognition sites tethered via Histidine tags to Ni2+ complexes that act as fluorescent quenchers for semi-conducting single walled carbon nanotubes embedded in a chitosan to measure binding kinetics of model glycans. Two higher-affined glycan-lectin pairs are explored: fucose (Fuc) to PA-IIL and N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc) to GafD. The dissociation constants (KD) for these pairs as free glycans (106 and 19 $\mu $M respectively) and streptavidin-tethered (142 and 50 $\mu $M respectively) were found. The absolute detection limit for the current platform was found to be 2 $\mu $g of glycosylated protein or 100 ng of free glycan to 20 $\mu $g of lectin. Glycan detection is demonstrated at the single nanotube level (GlcNAc to GafD). Over a population of 1000 nanotubes, 289 of the SWNT sensors had signals strong enough to yield kinetic information (KD of 250 $\pm $ 10 $\mu $M). We are also able to identify the locations of ``strong-transducers'' on the basis of dissociation constant (4 sensors with KD $<$ 10 $\mu $M) or overall signal modulation (8 sensors with $>$ 5{\%} quench response). The ability to pinpoint strong-binding, single sensors is promising to build a nanoarray of glycan-lectin transducers as a method to profile glycans without protein labeling or glycan liberation pretreatment steps.

Authors

  • Nigel Reuel

    MIT - Chemical Engineering

  • Jin-Ho Ahn

    MIT - Chemical Engineering

  • Jong-Ho Kim

    Hanyang University, Ansan, Republic of Korea

  • Jingqing Zhang

    MIT - Chemical Engineering

  • Ardemis Boghossian

    MIT - Chemical Engineering

  • Lara Mahal

    NYU - Chemistry

  • Michael Strano

    Massachusetts Institute of Technology, MIT - Chemical Engineering, MIT