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Utilizing adsorbed proteoliposomes trapped in a non-ruptured state on SiO2 for amplified detection of membrane proteins

Year: 2004

Journal: Biosensors and Bioelectronics 20 (2004) 498–504, 20100827

Authors: Graneli A., Rydström J., Kasemo B., Höök F.

Last authors: Fredrik Höök

Organizations: Department of Applied Physics, Chalmers University of Technology and Göteborg University, SE-412 96 Göteborg, Sweden

Country: Sweden

The quartz crystal microbalance with dissipation (QCM-D) technique was used to monitor the formation of supported phospholipid bilayers (SPBs) on SiO2 using proteoliposomes with reconstituted proton translocating nicotinamide nucleotide transhydrogenase (TH). Exposure of the surface to such proteoliposomes creates a lipid film composed of a mixture of proteolipid bilayers and adsorbed non-ruptured proteoliposomes, where the fraction of the latter is reduced if the TH-liposomes are pretreated with trypsin to remove the water soluble domains of TH [Langmuir 19 (2003) 842]. In the present work, the latter study is complemented by investigating the influence of trypsin treatment of the mixed adlayer (proteolipid bilayer +non-ruptured proteoliposomes) after adsorption on the surface. This demonstrates howtrypsin-cleavage induced rupture of adsorbed TH-liposomes can be utilized to detect the presence of less than 0.04 pmol/cm 2 of immobilized TH.