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| United States Patent Application |
20090270317
|
| Kind Code
|
A1
|
|
CHILKOTI; Ashutosh
|
October 29, 2009
|
Pharmaceutical compositions comprising bioelastomer fusion proteins
Abstract
Bioelastomers are disclosed for use in methods of binding compounds
including immunoassay methods, in biosensors and methods or regenerating
biosensors, and in methods for targeting the delivery of a compound to a
particular location within an animal subjects. In general, the
bioelastomer is conjugated to a binding compound, which is in turn used
to bind a compound of interest. For targeted compound delivery, the
bioelastomer is conjugated to the compound to be delivered.
| Inventors: |
CHILKOTI; Ashutosh; (Durham, NC)
|
| Correspondence Address:
|
COOLEY GODWARD KRONISH LLP;ATTN: Patent Group
Suite 1100, 777 - 6th Street, NW
WASHINGTON
DC
20001
US
|
| Serial No.:
|
203580 |
| Series Code:
|
12
|
| Filed:
|
September 3, 2008 |
| Current U.S. Class: |
514/21.2 |
| Class at Publication: |
514/12 |
| International Class: |
A61K 38/16 20060101 A61K038/16; A61P 35/00 20060101 A61P035/00 |
Claims
1-68. (canceled)
69. A pharmaceutical composition comprising a therapeutically effective
amount of a fusion protein and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier,the
composition formulated for systemic administration by injection, and the
fusion protein comprising a bioelastic protein and at least one
therapeutic protein or peptide,wherein the fusion protein is in soluble
form at physiological conditions.
70. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the bioelastic
protein is fused to the C-terminus of the therapeutic protein or peptide.
71. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the bioelastic
protein has a molecular weight of from about 24.3 to about 71 kDa.
72. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 71, wherein the bioelastic
protein has a molecular weight of about 50 kDa.
73. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the bioelastic
protein has a transition temperature under physiological conditions of
from about 37.degree. C. to about 60.degree. C.
74. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the bioelastic
protein has a transition temperature under physiological conditions of
about 40 to 42.degree. C.
75. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the bioelastic
protein forms a beta-spiral structure.
76. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the bioelastic
protein comprises repeats of the sequence Val-Pro-Gly-X-Gly, where each X
is an independently selected amino acid.
77. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 76, wherein X is independently
selected from valine, alanine, and glycine.
78. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 76, wherein the bioelastic
protein has the formula (VPGXG).sub.n, where n is greater than 100.
79. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the therapeutic
protein or peptide is an antibody or hormone sequence.
80. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the composition is
formulated for systemic administration by subcutaneous injection,
intradermal injection, intravenous injection, or intramuscular injection.
81. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the
pharmaceutically acceptable carrier comprises a buffered aqueous
solution.
82. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the
pharmaceutically acceptable carrier comprises a non-aqueous liquid.
83. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the
pharmaceutically acceptable carrier comprises a water-in-oil emulsion or
an oil-in-water emulsion.
84. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 69, wherein the composition is
isotonic with human blood.
85. A method for treating a patient comprising, administering the
pharmaceutical composition of claim 69 to a patient in need of said
therapeutic protein or peptide.
Description
RELATED APPLICATIONS
[0001]This application is a continuation-in-part of commonly owned,
copending application Ser. No. 09/273,025, filed Mar. 19, 1999, the
disclosure of which is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0002]The present invention concerns bioelastic polymers and methods of
use thereof, particularly for immunoassays, for the production of
regenerable biosensors, for the localized delivery of compounds in vivo,
and for the patterning of molecules on substrates.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0003]Numerous bioelastic polymers, also known as bioelastomers or
elastin-like proteins ("ELPs") are known. Examples are described in D.
Urry et al., A Simple Method for the Purification of a Bioelastic
Polymer, PCT Application WO 96/32406. Such compounds are proteins or
peptides, typically polypeptides, that exhibit an inverse temperature
transition: that is, the compounds condense at a higher temperature range
in an aqueous system on raising the temperature of the compounds through
their transition temperature (T.sub.I). Bioelastic polymers are soluble
in water at a sufficiently low temperature, but hydrophobically fold and
associate to form a separate phase as the temperature is raised through a
particular temperature range.
1. Separation and Immunoassay Systems.
[0004]Immunoassays are commonly used to detect analytes such as enzymes,
hormones, drugs, and other molecules of interest in complex biological
mixtures. By definition, an immunoassay relies on the specific binding of
an antigen by an antibody, but assays using other biological high
affinity binding partners (e.g., ligand-cell surface receptor,
inhibitor-enzyme, etc.) can also be employed in an analogous manner. A
number of different immunoassay formats have been developed to detect
and/or quantitate the levels of analytes; for a review of immunoassays,
see PCT Patent Application WO 86/06492.
2. Biosensor Systems and Biosensor Regeneration.
[0005]Ligand-binding proteins such as receptors and antibodies, currently
used in biosensors, can detect specific analytes (ligands) with high
sensitivity in the presence of potential interference's in complex
mixtures. The high affinity of protein-analyte interactions is the basis
of their exquisite sensitivity. However, high affinity is generally
accompanied by an extremely slow dissociation rate (off rate) of the
protein-ligand complex. Therefore, in practice, most biosensors are "one
shot" devices; dosimeters rather than continuous sensors or
alternatively, sensors with very slow response times. In order to use
biosensors for the semi-continuous, in situ monitoring of analytes, or
for subsequent rounds of sensing in batch mode, the sensor must be
regenerated for reuse in an expedient time frame.
[0006]There are two possible approaches to sensor regeneration. When the
receptor is covalently coupled to the sensor surface, free receptor can
be regenerated by displacing the bound analyte. Unfortunately, methods to
gently and reversibly regenerate analyte-free receptor do not currently
exist: most current methods disrupt noncovalent interactions between
analyte and receptor by partially denaturing the receptor using drastic
changes in the protein-ligand environment such as low pH (<3), or high
chaotrope concentration, conditions which often irreversibly denature the
protein after a few rounds of regeneration.
[0007]If the receptor is not covalently attached to the substrate, a
second method for surface regeneration is feasible where the surface
itself can be regenerated by removing the analyte-bound receptor from the
surface. The potential advantage is that the analyte "sees" fresh
receptor in every round of sensing, which can decrease drift in the
sensor response and maintain high affinity and homogenous binding
kinetics. This approach to sensor regeneration is difficult to broadly
implement because noncovalent methods to immobilize proteins on surfaces
typically involves their physical adsorption, which is typically
irreversible, and subsequent stripping of adsorbed protein with
detergents or chaotropes is frequently incomplete. In order to
noncovalently and reversibly bind a receptor to the surface, methods must
be found to reversibly control the physico-chemical properties of the
receptor such that the adsorption-desorption process can be triggered
reversibly.
3. Targeted Delivery of Therapeutics to Solid Tumors by
Thermally-Responsive Polymers.
[0008]The targeted delivery of drugs to solid tumors is a complex problem
because of the impediments to drug delivery that are posed by tumor
heterogeneity. Cancer cells typically occupy less than half of the total
tumor volume. Approximately 1-10% is contributed by tumor vasculature,
and the rest is occupied by a collagen-rich interstitium. The major
impediments to drug delivery arise from heterogeneous distribution of
blood vessels, combined with aberrant branching and tortuosity, which
results in uneven and slowed blood flow. The leakiness of tumor vessels
combined with the absence of a functional lymphatic system results in an
elevated interstitial pressure, which retards the convective transport of
high MW (>2000 Da) drugs. R. Jain, Sci. Am. 271: 58-65 (1994). The
heterogeneity of antigen and receptor expression in tumors is an
additional problem in affinity-targeted delivery of drugs to solid
tumors.
[0009]Front-line therapies for different tumors include surgery,
chemotherapy, and radiation. The infiltrative nature of many solid tumors
often prevents complete surgical resection because of the high risk of
compromising function, thereby necessitating postoperative chemotherapy
and/or radiotherapy. However, chemotherapy, particularly when delivered
systemically is of limited effectiveness due to inadequate drug delivery,
systemic toxicity, and a markedly variable biological sensitivity.
External beam irradiation, while useful for many types of tumors, is also
limited by dose limiting toxicity to healthy tissue.
[0010]Two other treatment modalities that have been suggested for the
treatment of solid tumors, are hyperthermia [S. Field and J. Hand, An
Introduction to the Practical Aspects of Clinical Hyperthermia (Taylor
and Francis, London 1990)] and targeted radiotherapy [C. Hoefnagel., Int.
J. Biol. Markers 8: 172 (1993); M. Gaze, Phys. Med. Biol. 41: 1895
(1993)]. The use of local hyperthermia as a therapeutic modality for sold
tumors is motivated by the increased thermal sensitivity of tumor
vasculature compared to normal vasculature. Hyperthermia, at temperatures
between 40 and 42.degree. C., is known to increase tumor blood flow and
vascular permeability. Because hyperthermia sensitizes cells to
radiation, it has been combined with radiation therapy to increase tumor
cytotoxicity [M. Hauck et al., in Handbook of Targeted Delivery of
Imaging Agents, pp. 335-361 (V. Torchilin Ed. 1995)].
[0011]The limitations of current therapeutic approaches for the management
of solid tumors provide a compelling need for the development of improved
modalities for the targeted delivery of therapeutics.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0012]A first aspect of the present invention is a method of binding a
compound of interest in an aqueous solution. The method comprises the
steps of:
[0013](a) providing a conjugate comprising a bioelastic compound and a
binding compound, wherein the binding compound specifically binds the
compound of interest, and wherein the bioelastic compound has a
transition temperature below which the bioelastic compound is soluble in
the solution, and above which the bioelastic compound is insoluble in the
solution;
[0014](b) contacting the conjugate to the compound of interest in an
aqueous solution so that the compound binds thereto, with the contacting
step carried out at a temperature below the transition temperature of the
bioelastic compound; and then
[0015](c) raising the temperature of the conjugate to a temperature above
the transition temperature of the bioelastic compound so that the
conjugate separates from the aqueous solution with the compound of
interest bound thereto. Separation may be passive (e.g., precipitation in
solution) or active (e.g., by centrifugation or filtration). Thus, the
step of "raising the temperature" may be thought of as being followed by
a step of separating (i.e., actively separating) the conjugate with the
compound of interest bound thereto from the solution.
[0016]A second aspect of the present invention is a method useful for
immunologically detecting an analyte in an aqueous solution. The method
comprises the steps of:
[0017](a) providing a conjugate comprising a bioelastic compound and a
binding compound, wherein the binding compound specifically binds the
analyte, and wherein the bioelastic compound has a transition temperature
below which the bioelastic compound is soluble in the solution, and above
which the bioelastic compound is insoluble in the solution;
[0018](b) contacting the conjugate to the analyte in an aqueous solution
so that the compound binds thereto, with the contacting step carried out
at a temperature below the transition temperature of the bioelastic
compound;
[0019](c) raising the temperature of the conjugate to a temperature above
the transition temperature of the bioelastic compound so that the
conjugate separates from the aqueous solution with the analyte bound
thereto; and then
[0020](d) detecting the analyte.
[0021]A third aspect of the present invention is an article useful as a
regenerable biosensor for binding a compound of interest from an aqueous
solution, or for any such other purposes to which the article may be
suitable. The article comprises:
[0022](a) a solid support having a hydrophobic surface formed thereon; and
[0023](b) a conjugate reversibly bonded to the hydrophobic surface, the
conjugate comprising (i) a bioelastic compound and a (ii) binding
compound, wherein the binding compound specifically binds the compound of
interest, and wherein the bioelastic compound has a transition
temperature below which the bioelastic compound is soluble in the
solution, and above which the bioelastic compound is insoluble in the
solution; so that the biosensor may be used to bind the compound of
interest at a temperature above the transition temperature, and so that
the conjugate can be removed from the solid support for recycling of the
article by lowering the temperature of the solid support (and/or the
solution; so long as the temperature of the conjugate is lowered) below
the transition temperature.
[0024]A fourth aspect of the invention is a method of recycling a used
biosensor to which has been bound a compound of interest. The method
comprises:
[0025](a) providing a biosensor comprising a solid support having a
hydrophobic surface formed thereon and a first conjugate reversibly
bonded to the hydrophobic surface, the conjugate comprising (i) a
bioelastic compound (which is bonded to the hydrophobic surface by
hydrophobic interactions when at a temperature above its transition
temperature) and (ii) a binding compound, wherein the binding compound
has the compound of interest specifically bound thereto, and wherein the
bioelastic compound has a transition temperature below which the
bioelastic compound is soluble in the solution, and above which the
bioelastic compound is insoluble in the solution; and then
[0026](b) separating the conjugate with the compound of interest bound
thereto from the solid support by lowering the temperature of the
biosensor to below the transition temperature; and then
[0027](c) binding a second conjugate to the hydrophobic surface, the
second conjugate comprising a second bioelastic compound and a second
binding compound, so that the biosensor may be reused. The second
conjugate may be the same as or different from the first conjugate.
[0028]A fifth aspect of the present invention is a method for the targeted
delivering of a compound in vivo to a selected region within a subject.
The method comprises:
[0029](a) administering a conjugate to the subject, the conjugate
comprising the compound to be delivered and a polymer that undergoes an
inverse temperature transition, wherein the polymer has a transition
temperature (T.sub.I) greater than the temperature at which the compound
is delivered; and then
[0030](b) heating the selected region to a temperature greater than the
transition temperature of the polymer, so that the compound is
preferentially delivered to the selected region.
[0031]A sixth aspect of the present invention is the use of a conjugate as
described above for the preparation of a medicament for the targeted
delivery of a compound as described above.
[0032]The foregoing and other objects and aspects of the present invention
are explained in detail in the drawings herein and the specification
below.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0033]FIG. 1 illustrates the Expression construct in pET-32b, which
includes two N-terminal domains: thioredoxin, and a (His).sub.6 tag.
[0034]FIG. 2a illustrates an immunoassay with no thioredoxin-ELP (and
hence no specific antibody capture);
[0035]FIG. 2b illustrates an immunoassay with 10:1
thioredoxin-ELP:antibody ratio (and hence nearly complete antibody
capture);
[0036]FIG. 3 illustrates an immunoassay calibration curve. The X-axis is
the ratio of unlabeled to total antibody concentrations, with points
corresponding to unlabeled antibody concentrations of 0, 0.005, 0.05,
0.5, and 5 .mu.M (left to right). The Y-axis is the ratio of fluorescence
in the pellet to total fluorescence (pellet+supernatant), and represents
the fraction of labeled anti-thioredoxin antibodies specifically
captured.
[0037]FIG. 4. Absorbance at 350 nm of the thioredoxin-ELP 18-mer by
UV-visible spectrop
hotometry in 50 mM phosphate, pH 7.4, 1 M NaCl.
Relative turbidity is defined as the absorbance at 350 nm (due to
scattering) normalized to the maximum absorbance at the same wavelength
during the course of the experiment.
[0038]FIG. 5. In situ ellipsometry measurements of the change in adlayer
thickness of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein in contact with a
hydrophobic SAM as a function of temperature, calculated by nonlinear
regression using the measured values of the polarizer and analyzer
angles. The thickness of the protein adlayer measured by ellipsometry
increases as the temperature is raised through the T.sub.I to a maximum
of 180 .ANG., and decreases to within 5 .ANG. of the baseline thickness
upon lowering the temperature to .about.18.degree. C.
[0039]FIG. 6 illustrates relative SPR signal as a function of recording
time of the experiment. The recording time is not identical to the
experimental time, since some time segments such as flushing, buffer
exchange, etc. are not included, to enhance clarity.
[0040]FIG. 7 illustrates desorption of thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein
monitored by the SPR signal relative to control channel as a function of
temperature.
[0041]FIG. 8. Absorbance at 350 nm of the ELP 6-mer (filled squares).
9-mer (open squares), and 18-mer (filled triangles) as a function of
temperature.
[0042]FIG. 9. Absorbance at 350 nm of the ELP 15-mer (filled squares) and
poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer (open squares) by UV-visible
spectrop
hotometry. Assay conditions: 1 mg/ml, PBS, pH 7.2 heating
rate=.about.1.0.degree. C./min.
[0043]FIG. 10. Absorbance at 350 nm of the ELP 15-mer (filled squares) and
Rhodamine-ELP 15 mer conjugate (filled circles) by UV-visible
spectrophotometry. Assay conditions: 1 mg/ml, PBS, pH 7.2 heating
rate=.about.1.0.degree. C./min.
[0044]FIG. 11A. Fluorescence intensities of Rhodamine-ELP conjugate in
tumor window chamber as a function of time post injection under
hyperthermic conditions (42.degree. C.). The light intensity of a
representative vascular region (I.sub.v) (open squares) and interstitial
region (I.sub.i) (filled squares) are shown normalized to the maximum
vascular concentration.
[0045]FIG. 11B. Fluorescence intensities of Rhodamine-ELP conjugate in
tumor window chamber as a function of time post injection under
normothermic conditions (34.degree. C.). The light intensity of a
representative vascular region (I.sub.v) (open squares) and interstitial
region (I.sub.i) (filled squares) are shown normalized to the maximum
vascular concentration.
[0046]FIG. 12A shows a fluoroescence image of a tumor under hyperthermic
conditions (42.degree. C.).
[0047]FIG. 12B shows a fluoroescence image of a tumor under normothermic
control (34.degree. C.).
[0048]FIG. 13. Turbidity profile of 1 .mu.M thioredoxin-ELP as a function
of temperature in PBS at 150 mM NaCl and 1.25 M NaCl. The change in
turbidity with increasing temperature indicates the onset of the inverse
phase transition due to the formation of aggregates of the
thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein. Two thermal cycles are shown in (A) (the
up and down cycles are marked by arrows), showing the reversibility of
the inverse phase transition. These results also show that the inverse
transition can be induced isothermally at room temperature by increasing
the ionic strength by the addition of NaCl.
[0049]FIG. 14. Binding and desorption of a thioredoxin antibody onto the
thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein, adsorbed above its T.sub.t onto a HDT SAM
on gold. The relative SPR signal (channel 1-channel 2) is shown as a
function of recording time of the experiment. The recording time is not
identical to the experimental time, because some time segments in the SPR
experiment such as flushing, buffer exchange, etc. are not included, to
enhance clarity.
[0050]FIG. 15A. Adsorption of thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein on a
patterned hydrophobic SAM on a hydrophilic SAM background in response to
the ELP phase transition. Fluorescence microscopy of a hydrophobic
patterned SAM against a hydrophilic background (40 .mu.m wide lines of
HDT against a background of MUD) incubated with Alexa488 labeled
thioredoxin-ELP (1 .mu.M in PBS) after addition of NaCl to a final
concentration of 1.25 M to drive the phase transition. The sample was
washed in high ionic strength buffer before imaging the sample in the
same buffer.
[0051]FIG. 15B. Reversibility of the pattern upon driving the phase
transition backwards. A line profile of the intensity of the fluorescence
images of a patterned HDT/MUD SAM on Au after incubation of Alexa488
labeled thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein in high ionic strength (PBS+1.25 M
NaCl) and after washing the patterned sample (as in (A) and whose
contrast is shown by the upper line intensity profile) in low ionic
strength buffer (PBS) at 4.degree. C.
[0052]FIG. 16A. Binding of an anti-thioredoxin monoclonal antibody-FITC
conjugate to a thioredoxin-ELP pattern (formed as in FIG. 3) under high
ionic strength conditions, with the exception that the thioredoxin-ELP
was not labeled with a fluorophore.
[0053]FIG. 16B. Reversibility of the pattern, as shown by the line profile
of the fluorescence intensity of the bound antibody-FITC conjugate at
1.25 M NaCl (upper line profile) and after reversing the ELP phase
transition by lowering the ionic strength and reducing the temperature to
4.degree. C.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
[0054]"Compound of interest" as used herein refers to any compound,
including proteins, peptides, nucleic acids particularly polynucleic
acids (e.g., DNA, RNA), organic compounds, etc. Such compounds may be
antibodies, receptors, ligands, hormones, drugs, etc. When the method of
the invention is employed to qualitatively or quantitatively detect the
compound of interest, the compound of interest may be referred to as an
"analyte". The compound of interest or analyte may be carried by a cell
(particularly on the surface of a cell) so that a cell (or cell of
interest) is bound to the binding partner through the compound of
interest.
[0055]"Binding compound" as used herein refers to a compound that
specifically or selectively binds the compound of interest. In general,
the binding compound and the compound of interest together comprise a
specific binding pair. The binding compound may be any compound,
including proteins, peptides, nucleic acids particularly polynucleic
acids (e.g., DNA, RNA), organic compounds, etc. Such compounds may be
antibodies, receptors, ligands, hormones, drugs, etc.
[0056]"Conjugate" as used herein refers to two moieties or functional
groups that are covalently or noncovalently joined to one another, such
that the two groups function together as a single structure under the
conditions of the methods described herein. In one embodiment, the
conjugate is a fusion protein. The binding compound may be carried by
(e.g., on the surface of) a cell, which cell is coupled to the polymer
that undergoes an inverse temperature transition through an antibody or
other binding partner with the cell.
[0057]"Fusion protein" as used herein refers to a protein or peptide,
produced by recombinant means (i.e., expression from a nucleic acid) that
is comprised of a first protein or peptide covalently joined on
expression to a second protein or peptide.
[0058]A "polymer that undergoes an inverse temperature transition" herein
refers to a polymer that is soluble in an aqueous solution at a lower
temperature, and is insoluble in an aqueous solution at a higher
temperature.
[0059]"Transition temperature" or "T.sub.I" as used herein, refers to the
temperature above which a polymer that undergoes an inverse temperature
transition is insoluble in an aqueous system (e.g., water, physiological
saline solution), and below which such a polymer is soluble in an aqueous
system. Preferred T.sub.Is for in vitro applications of the invention are
O.degree. or 20.degree. to 60.degree. or 100.degree. C.; preferred
T.sub.Is for in vivo applications are 35.degree. to 45.degree. C.
[0060]A "bioelastic polymer" is, in general, a polypeptide that exhibits
an inverse temperature transition. Bioelastic polymers are discussed in
greater detail below.
[0061]"Poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) polymer" as used herein refers to a
class of polymers, including copolymers thereof, that exhibit an inverse
temperature transition. The polymers are formed of at least
N-isopropylacrylamide, and may include other monomers that polymerize
therewith, such as acrylamide (Aam), methacrylamide, propylacrylamide,
butylacrylamide, acrylate, methacrylate, etc.
1. Bioelastic Polymers.
[0062]Bioelastic polymers are, in general, polypeptides that comprise
repeating units that form beta-turns. A beta-turn is a 10 atom
hydrogen-bonded ring in which the C.dbd.O of amino acid residue i is
hydrogen-bonded to the NH residue of amino acid i+3. Repetitive
beta-turns result in elastic beta-spiral structures. Bioelastic polymers,
in general, are soluble in water at a sufficiently low temperature, but
hydrophobically fold and associate to form a separate phase as the
temperature is raised through the transition temperature. When more
hydrophobic amino acids are included in the bioelastic polymer the
transition temperature is lower; when fewer hydrophobic amino acids are
included in the bioelastic polymer the transition temperature is greater.
The phase transition can occur reversibly or irreversibly upon raising
the temperature. The chain length of the bioelastic polymer is not
critical, but typically is from 10 or 20 to 50, 100, 200, or 1000 or more
amino acids. Numerous bioelastic polymers are known and described in, for
example, U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,132,746; 4,187,852; 4,589,822; 4,870,055; and
5,064,430 (applicants specifically intend that the disclosures of all
patent references cited herein be incorporated herein by reference in
their entirety). A particularly preferred bioelastic polymer is one that
contains the elastin repeat: (Val-Pro-Gly-X-Gly).sub.n or (VPGXG).sub.n,
where n is from 2, 3 or 4 to 10, 20, 30, 40, 100 or 200 or more, and X is
any amino acid, such as valine, alanine or glycine, with X being the same
or different in each repeat unit of the polypeptide chain (that is, X may
be a combination of different amino acids, in various ratios).
2. Separation and Immunoassay Systems.
[0063]As noted above, the present invention provides a method of binding a
compound of interest in an aqueous solution, the method comprising the
steps of:
[0064](a) providing a conjugate comprising a bioelastic compound and a
binding compound, wherein the binding compound specifically binds the
compound of interest, and wherein the bioelastic compound has a
transition temperature below which the bioelastic compound is soluble in
the solution, and above which the bioelastic compound is insoluble in the
solution;
[0065](b) contacting the conjugate to the compound of interest in an
aqueous solution so that the compound binds thereto, with the contacting
step carried out at a temperature below the transition temperature of the
bioelastic compound; and then
[0066](c) raising the temperature of the conjugate to a temperature above
the transition temperature of the bioelastic compound so that the
conjugate separates from the aqueous solution with the compound of
interest bound thereto.
[0067]As noted above, the binding compound may be any suitable molecule,
such as a protein or peptide. The binding compound may be an antibody.
Likewise, the compound of interest, may be a protein or peptide such as
an antibody.
[0068]When the method is used as an immunoassay, the compound of interest
is referred to as an analyte, and the binding step is followed by the
step of detecting the analyte. Typically, but not in all cases, either
the binding compound or the analyte is an antibody in an immunoassay. How
detection of the analyte is carried out is not critical and will depend
upon the particular immunoassay format. The present invention can be
implemented with any immunoassay format, including direct immunoassays,
indirect immunoassays, and sandwich assays; and heterogeneous or
homogeneous immunoassays, numerous variations of which are known to
persons skilled in the art.
3. Biosensor Systems and Biosensor Regeneration.
[0069]As also noted above, the present invention provides an article
useful as a regenerable biosensor for binding a compound of interest from
an aqueous solution, the article comprising:
[0070](a) a solid support having a hydrophobic surface formed thereon; and
[0071](b) a conjugate reversibly bonded to the hydrophobic surface, the
conjugate comprising (i) a bioelastic compound and a (ii) binding
compound, wherein the binding compound specifically binds the compound of
interest, and wherein the bioelastic compound has a transition
temperature below which the bioelastic compound is soluble in the
solution, and above which the bioelastic compound is insoluble in the
solution; so that the biosensor may be used to bind the compound of
interest at a temperature above the transition temperature, and so that
the conjugate can be removed from the solid support for recycling of the
article by lowering the temperature of the solid support (or the solution
in which the solid support is carried, so long as the temperature of the
bioelastic compound is lowered) below the transition temperature. Again,
the binding compound may be a protein or peptide, such as an antibody,
and the compound of interest may be a protein or peptide, such as an
antibody.
[0072]The present invention can be utilized with any type of biosensor
where it is desirable to regenerate a solid support that has a binding
compound immobilized thereon. For example, the present invention may be
utilized with optical biosensors such as described in U.S. Pat. Nos.
5,313,264 to Ulf et al., 5,846,842 to Herron et al., 5,496,701 to
Pollard-Knight et al., etc. The present invention may be utilized with
potentiometric or electrochemical biosensors, such as described in U.S.
Pat. No. 5,413,690 to Kost, or PCT Application WO98/35232 to Fowlkes and
Thorp. The present invention may be utilized with a diamond film
biosensor, such as described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,777,372 to Kobashi. Thus,
the solid support may be organic or inorganic; may be metal (e.g., copper
or silver) or non-metal; may be a polymer or nonpolymer; may be
conducting, semiconducting or nonconducting (insulating); may be
reflecting or nonreflecting; may be porous or nonporous; etc. For
example, the solid support may be comprised of polyethylene,
polytetrafluoroethylene, gold, silicon, silicon oxide, silicon
oxynitride, indium, platinum, iridium, indium tin oxide, diamond or
diamond-like film, etc. When the solid support does not inherently
provide a hydrophobic surface to which the bioelastic polymer may
reversibly bind (i.e., non-covalently, primarily by means of hydrophobic
interactions), the surface may be functionalized or coated to render it
hydrophobic in accordance with any of a variety of standard techniques.
[0073]The present invention may be utilized with different binding
compounds or compounds of interested are desired to be bound to a
substrate, for the high throughput screening of molecular interactions,
such as in "chip-based" and "pin-based" combinatorial chemistry
techniques, and can be prepared by modification of known techniques based
on the disclosure provided herein. In such case the substrate or solid
support has a surface portion, with the surface portion comprising a
plurality of discrete known regions (each of which has a hydrophobic
surface portion formed thereon). A plurality of different conjugates
(differing in the binding compound, and optionally in the bioelastic
compound thereof) are bound to the surface portion, with different
conjugates positioned on the surface portion in different ones of the
discrete known regions. All can be prepared in accordance with known
techniques. See, e.g., U.S. Pat. No. 5,445,934 to Fodor et al., U.S. Pat.
No. 5,288,514 to Ellman, and U.S. Pat. No. 5,624,711 to Sundberg et al.,
the disclosures of which are incorporated by reference herein in their
entirety.
[0074]Thus the present invention provides a method of recycling a
biosensor as described above by:
[0075](a) providing a biosensor comprising a solid support having a
hydrophobic surface formed thereon and a first conjugate reversibly
bonded to the hydrophobic surface, the conjugate comprising (i) a
bioelastic compound and (ii) a binding compound, wherein the binding
compound has the compound of interest specifically bound thereto, and
wherein the bioelastic compound has a transition temperature below which
the bioelastic compound is soluble in the solution, and above which the
bioelastic compound is insoluble in the solution; and then
[0076](b) separating the conjugate with the compound of interest bound
thereto from the solid support by lowering the temperature of the
biosensor (or the solution in which the sensor is carried, so long as the
temperature of the bioelastic compound is lowered) to below the
transition temperature; and then
[0077](c) binding a second conjugate to the hydrophobic surface, the
second conjugate comprising a second bioelastic compound and a second
binding compound, so that the biosensor may be reused. Again, the second
conjugate may be the same or different from the first conjugate, and
either or both of the second bioelastic compound and second binding
compound may be different from the first.
4. Targeted Delivery of Therapeutics to Solid Tumors by
Thermally-Responsive Polymers.
[0078]As discussed above, a method for the targeted delivering of a
compound in vivo to a selected region within a subject comprises: (a)
administering a conjugate to the subject, the conjugate comprising the
compound to be delivered and a polymer that undergoes an inverse
temperature transition, wherein the polymer has a transition temperature
(T.sub.I) greater than the temperature at which the compound is
delivered; and then (b) heating the selected region to a temperature
greater than the transition temperature of the polymer, so that the
compound is preferentially delivered to the selected region. The polymer
may be a bioelastic polymer as described above, or may be a
poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) polymer as described above.
[0079]While the present invention is concerned primarily with the
treatment of human subjects, the invention may also be used for the
treatment of animal subjects, particularly mammalian subjects such as
dogs, cats, horses, cows, pigs, etc., for veterinary purposes.
[0080]Administering of the conjugate to the subject may be carried out by
any suitable means, such as subcutaneous injection, intraperitoneal
injection, intraveneous injection, intramuscular injection, oral
administration, inhalation administration, transdermal administration,
etc. Preferred administration techniques are typically "systemic" in that
a particular region of interest is not specifically targeted.
[0081]The selected region may be any suitable target or portion of the
subject's body, such as a limb, organ, or other tissue or tissue portion.
The selected region may be comprised of hyperproliferative tissue which
may be malignant or non-malignant, such as a solid tumor). Examples of
tumors, cancers and neoplastic tissue that can be treated by the present
invention include but are not limited to malignant disorders such as
breast cancers; osteosarcomas; angiosarcomas; fibrosarcomas and other
sarcomas; leukemias; lymphomas; sinus tumors; ovarian, uretal, bladder,
prostate and other genitourinary cancers; colon esophageal and stomach
cancers and other gastrointestinal cancers; lung cancers; myelomas;
pancreatic cancers; liver cancers; kidney cancers; endocrine cancers;
skin cancers; and brain or central and peripheral nervous (CNS) system
tumors, malignant or benign, including gliomas and neuroblastomas.
Examples of premalignant and nonneoplastic hyperproliferative disorders
include but are not limited to myelodysplastic disorders; cervical
carcinoma-in-situ; familial intestinal polyposes such as Gardner
syndrome; oral leukoplakias; histiocytoses; keloids; hemangiomas; etc.
[0082]Heating of the selected region may be carried out by any means, such
as by application of an heat source e.g., a heat pad, a hot water bath,
infrared heating lamps, etc., or by heating means such as directing
microwave, ultrasound or other radio frequency energy at the selected
region, etc.
[0083]Any suitable compound for which targeted delivery is desired may be
administered by this means, including imaging agents (or contrast agents)
and therapeutic agents.
[0084]In a preferred embodiment, the therapeutic agent is a radionuclide.
Any radionuclide, whether it be for therapeutic or imaging purposes, may
be employed, including but not limited to, .sup.131I, .sup.90Y,
.sup.211At, .sup.212Bi, .sup.67Cu, .sup.186Re, .sup.188Re, and
.sup.212Pb.
[0085]The therapeutic agent may be a chemotherapeutic agent or cytotoxic
agent. Examples of chemotherapeutic agents which may be coupled to the
conjugate include, but are not limited to, met
hotrexate, adriamycin,
doxorubicin, taxol, etc. Examples of cytotoxic agents which may be
coupled to the conjugate include, but are not limited to, ricin, (or more
particularly the ricin A chain).
[0086]Imaging agents may be fluorescent compounds such as rhodamine or
green fluorescent protein (GFP) or a radionuclide such as .sup.111In.
[0087]Coupling of conjugates may be carried out by any suitable means,
such as by recombinant means where elastin is joined to a protein or
peptide such as GFP; by chemical means where the compound to be coupled
to the polymer is a small molecule; or by enzymatic coupling.
[0088]The conjugates (or "active compounds") described above may be
formulated for administration in a single pharmaceutical carrier or in
separate pharmaceutical carriers for the treatment of a variety of
conditions. In the manufacture of a pharmaceutical formulation according
to the invention, the active compounds including the physiologically
acceptable salts thereof, or the acid derivatives of either thereof are
typically admixed with, inter alia, an acceptable carrier. The carrier
must, of course, be acceptable in the sense of being compatible with any
other ingredients in the formulation and must not be deleterious to the
patient. The carrier may be a solid or a liquid, or both, and is
preferably formulated with the compound as a unit-dose formulation, for
example, a tablet, which may contain from 0.5% to 95% by weight of the
active compound. One or more active compounds may be incorporated in the
formulations of the invention, which may be prepared by any of the well
known techniques of pharmacy consisting essentially of admixing the
components, optionally including one or more accessory ingredients.
[0089]The formulations of the invention include those suitable for oral,
rectal, topical, buccal (e.g., sub-lingual), parenteral (e.g.,
subcutaneous, intramuscular, intradermal, or intravenous) and transdermal
administration, although the most suitable route in any given case will
depend on the nature and severity of the condition being treated and on
the nature of the particular active compound which is being used.
[0090]Formulations suitable for oral administration may be presented in
discrete units, such as capsules, cachets, lozenges, or tablets, each
containing a predetermined amount of the active compound; as a powder or
granules; as a solution or a suspension in an aqueous or non-aqueous
liquid; or as an oil-in-water or water-in-oil emulsion. Such formulations
may be prepared by any suitable method of pharmacy which includes the
step of bringing into association the active compound and a suitable
carrier (which may contain one or more accessory ingredients as noted
above). In general, the formulations of the invention are prepared by
uniformly and intimately admixing the active compound with a liquid or
finely divided solid carrier, or both, and then, if necessary, shaping
the resulting mixture. For example, a tablet may be prepared by
compressing or molding a powder or granules containing the active
compound, optionally with one or more accessory ingredients. Compressed
tablets may be prepared by compressing, in a suitable machine, the
compound in a free-flowing form, such as a powder or granules optionally
mixed with a binder, lubricant, inert diluent, and/or surface
active/dispersing agent(s). Molded tablets may be made by molding, in a
suitable machine, the powdered compound moistened with an inert liquid
binder.
[0091]Formulations of the present invention suitable for parenteral
administration conveniently comprise sterile aqueous preparations of the
active compound, which preparations are preferably isotonic with the
blood of the intended recipient. These preparations may be administered
by means of subcutaneous, intravenous, intramuscular, or intradermal
injection. Such preparations may conveniently be prepared by admixing the
compound with water or a glycine buffer and rendering the resulting
solution sterile and isotonic with the blood.
[0092]Formulations suitable for transdermal administration may be
presented as discrete patches adapted to remain in intimate contact with
the epidermis of the recipient for a prolonged period of time.
Formulations suitable for transdermal administration may also be
delivered by iontophoresis (see, for example, Pharmaceutical Research 3
(6):318 (1986)) and typically take the form of an optionally buffered
aqueous solution of the active compound. Suitable formulations comprise
citrate or bis\tris buffer (pH 6) or ethanol/water and contain from 0.1
to 0.2M active ingredient.
[0093]The therapeutically effective dosage of any one active agent, the
use of which is in the scope of present invention, will vary somewhat
from compound to compound, patient to patient, and will depend upon
factors such as the condition of the patient and the route of delivery.
Such dosages can be determined in accordance with routine pharmacological
procedures known to those skilled in the art, particularly in light of
the disclosure provided herein. In one example, the dosage is from 1 to
10 micrograms of active compound per Kilogram subject body weight.
[0094]In another example, where the therapeutic agent is .sup.131I, the
dosage to the patient is typically from 10 mCi to 100, 300 or even 500
mCi. Stated otherwise, where the therapeutic agent is .sup.131I, the
dosage to the patient is typically from 5,000 Rads to 100,000 Rads
(preferably at least 13,000 Rads, or even at least 50,000 Rads). Doses
for other radionuclides are typically selected so that the tumoricidal
dosae is equivalent to the foregoing range for .sup.131I.
5. Thermodynamically Addressable Reversible Adsorption of Peptides (TRAP).
[0095]Patterned biomolecules on surfaces have applications ranging from
modulation of cell-substrate interactions in biomaterials and tissue
engineering, to the fabrication of multi-analyte biosensors, clinical
assays, and genomic and proteomic arrays. Many methods exist to pattern
biomolecules on different substrates, such as metals, polymers, glass and
self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Patterned SAMs, which can be fabricated
by photolithography, micromachining, microwriting, and microcontact
printing (.mu.CP), are convenient molecular templates for protein
patterning on gold and silicon oxide substrates. A number of other
methods such as electrochemical patterning of SAMs on gold, direct
protein microstamping (also called .mu.CP) and reactive microcontact
printing onto SAMs and activated polymer surfaces have also been recently
applied to pattern proteins at the micrometer scale.
[0096]A primary limitation of many current patterning methods is the lack
of temporal control over the patterns. Most current protein patterning
methods result in static patterns, i.e., patterns that cannot be
dynamically controlled or modulated after fabrication. There are several
possible solutions to the problem of creating dynamic protein patterns.
The first approach is to create "smart" patterned templates--surfaces
whose reactivity can be turned on at specific times--to subsequently
allow dynamic presentation of ligands and immobilization of proteins. In
one example, Mrksich and coworkers have synthesized electroactive SAMS
which release attached groups when an electrical potential is applied to
the gold. More recently, they have shown that the reactivity of SAMs
presenting a terminal quinone-moiety can be chemically or
electrochemically modulated, and that a protein can be specifically
immobilized on these electroactive, dynamic SAMs. The extension of this
method to create dynamic protein patterns on these "smart" SAMs, still
remains to be achieved.
[0097]This application describes a different approach to directly modulate
the interaction between a patterned surface and a protein to create
dynamic protein patterns. This method involves extrinsic control of the
hydrophobic interaction between a protein and a surface template that
contains hydrophobic patterns against a protein-resistant hydrophilic
background. In one example embodiment (Example 5 below), we have imparted
environmentally triggered, reversible hydrophobicity to a model protein,
thioredoxin, by fusing it to an elastin-like polypeptide (ELP).
[0098]A further aspect of the present invention is, accordingly, an
article having a regenerable patterned surface for binding compounds of
interest from an aqueous solution, the article comprising: (a) a solid
support having a plurality of separate and discrete hydrophobic surfaces
formed thereon; and (b) a conjugate (e.g., a fusion protein) reversibly
bonded to each of the separate and discrete hydrophobic surfaces, the
conjugate comprising (i) a bioelastic compound and (ii) a binding
compound (e.g., a protein or peptide), wherein the binding compound
specifically binds a compound of interest, and wherein the bioelastic
compound has a transition temperature below which the bioelastic compound
is soluble in the solution, and above which the bioelastic compound is
insoluble in the solution; so that the surfaces may be used to bind a
compound of interest at a temperature above the transition temperature,
and so that the conjugate can be removed from the hydrophobic surface for
recycling of the article by lowering the temperature of the solid support
below the transition temperature. Preferably, the separate and discrete
hydrophobic surfaces are separated by a hydrophilic surface.
[0099]In one preferred embodiment, conjugates bound to different ones of
the separate and discrete hydrophobic surfaces have different bioelastic
compounds, so that different conjugates may be removed from different
hydrophobic surfaces with different release conditions. Any release
conditions may be employed, including but not limited to change in
temperature, ionic strength, pH, chemical or biochemical modification, or
binding of the ligand to sequences within an elastin that alter the
transition temperature and thereby induce the transition isothermally.
[0100]In a preferred embodiment, conjugates bound to different ones of the
separate and discrete hydrophobic surfaces have different binding
compounds, so that different compounds of interest are selectively bound
at different ones of the separate and discrete hydrophobic surfaces.
[0101]Any suitable binding compound may be employed, such as an antibody.
Any suitable compound of interest may be employed, including but not
limited to proteins and peptides (e.g., an antibody).
[0102]The solid support may comprise a polymer, a metal such as gold, a
semiconductor, and combinations thereof.
[0103]Further, a method of recycling a used article that has a patterned
surface to which has been bound at least one compound of interest,
comprises (a) providing an article as described above, and (b) separating
the conjugate from each of the separate and discrete hydrophobic surfaces
by lowering the temperature of the biosensor to below the transition
temperature. The method may further comprise the step of (c) binding a
second conjugate to each of the separate and discrete hydrophobic
surfaces, the second conjugate comprising a second bioelastic compound
and a second binding compound, so that the biosensor may be reused. The
first conjugates and the second conjugates replaced at each of the
separate and discrete hydrophobic surfaces may be the same or different.
In addition, individual ones of the conjugates may be released (and
optionally replaced), as where conjugates bound to different ones of the
separate and discrete hydrophobic surfaces each have a different
bioelastic compound, so that different ones of the conjugates may be
removed from different hydrophobic surfaces with different release
conditions.
[0104]The present invention is explained in greater detail in the
following non-limiting Examples.
Example 1
Production of a Thioredoxin-ELP Fusion Protein and Poly-NIPAAm/Am
Copolymer
[0105]Gene Synthesis. The synthetic gene for the ELP-1 mer was constructed
from four 5'-phosphorylated, PAGE purified synthetic oligonucleotides
(Integrated DNA Technologies, Inc.), ranging in size from 86 to 97 bases.
The oligonucleotides were annealed (100 pmol of each oligonucleotide in
50 .mu.l ligase buffer, NEB Inc.) to form double-stranded DNA spanning
the ELP gene with EcoRI and HindIII compatible ends. The annealed
oligonucleotides (2 pmol) were then ligated using T4 DNA ligase (10:1
insert:vector molar ratio) into EcoRI-HindIII linearized and
dephosphorylated pUC-19 (NEB, Inc.). Chemically competent E. Coli
XL1-Blue cells were then transformed with the ligation mixture, and
incubated on ampicillin-containing agar plates. Colonies were initially
screened by blue-white screening, and subsequently by colony PCR to
verify the presence of an insert. The DNA sequence of a putative insert
was verified by automated fluorescent DNA sequencing (ABI 373 DNA
Sequencer).
[0106]Gene Oligomerization. First, a 2-mer was created by ligating a 1-mer
into a vector containing a 1-mer insert. This process was repeated to
create a library of mers ranging from 2 to 9-mer. For a typical
oligomerization, the vector was linearized with PflMI, and enzymatically
dephosphorylated. The insert was doubly digested with PflMI and BglII,
purified by agarose gel electrophoresis (Qiaex II Gel Extraction Kit,
Qiagen Inc.), ligated into the linearized vector with T4 DNA ligase at a
5:1 insert vector molar ratio, and transformed into chemically competent
E. coli XL1-Blue cells. Transformants were screened by colony PCR, and
oligomerization of the 2-mer and 3-mer was further confirmed by DNA
sequencing. Standard molecular biology protocols were used for gene
synthesis and oligomerization (F. Ausubel et al., Current Protocols in
Molecular Biology (John Wiley & Sons 1995)).
[0107]Protein Expression. The genes were subcloned from pUC-19 into a
modified expression vector derived from pET-32b (Novagen Inc.). After
confirmation of successful cloning by colony PCR and DNA sequencing,
pET-32b containing the ELP insert were transformed into the expression
strain, BLR21(DE3) (Novagen, Inc.). 2xYT media, supplemented with 100
.mu.g/ml ampicillin, were inoculated with transformed cells, incubated at
37.degree. C. with shaking (250 rpm), and induced at an OD.sub.600 of 0.6
by the addition of isopropyl .alpha.-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) to a
final concentration of 1 mM. The culture were incubated an additional 3
hours, harvested by centrifugation at 4.degree. C., resuspended in water.
and lysed by ultrasonic disruption at 4.degree. C. Soluble and insoluble
fractions of the cell lysate were then characterized by sodium-dodecyl
sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) (U. Lammli, Nature
227: 680 (1971).
[0108]ELP Expression and Purification. The ELP of interest was expressed
as a C-terminal fusion, with thioredoxin and a (His).sub.6 tag at the
N-terminus with an intervening thrombin cleavage site (FIG. 1). The
fusion protein was initially purified by immobilized metal ion affinity
chromatography (IMAC) using a Nickel-chelating nitrilotriacetic
derivatized resin (Novagen Inc.) (J. Porath, Prot. Expr. Purif. 3: 262
(1992). Alternatively, the fusion protein was purified by repeated cycles
of thermal- or salt-induced aggregation, followed by centrifugation, and
resolubilization under conditions of low salt or temperature such that
the solution temperature was below the inverse transition of the ELP
fusion protein. After purification, the soluble ELP-thioredoxin fusion
was cleaved by incubation with thrombin, and the ELP was purified by
salt- or temperature cycling.
[0109]Synthesis and Characterization of Poly(NIPAAm) copolymer. The
T.sub.I of poly(NIPAAm) can be adjusted by copolymerizing NIPAAm with
acrylamide homologs. Based on previous studies which have reported on
this effect (C. Chiklis and J. Grasshof, J. Polym. Sci. Part A-2 8: 1617
(1970); L. Taylor and L. Cerankowski, J. Polym. Sci. Polym. Chem. 13:
2551 (1975)), we synthesized .about.3 g. of an amine-terminated
poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer containing 16.6 mol % AAm by free radical
copolymerization of NIPAAm and AAm in methanol at 60.degree. C. for 20 h
using 1 mmol % of 2,2'-azobisbutyronitrile (AIBN) as initiator and 1 mmol
% of 2-aminoethanethiol hydrochloride (AET) as chain transfer agent. (Y.
Takei et al., Bioconj. Chem. 4: 42 (1993). The copolymer was purified by
precipitating the reaction solution into diethyl ether and dried under
vacuum. The molecular weight distribution of this copolymer was
determined by gel permeation chromatography using monodisperse
poly(ethylene glycol) standards to calibrate the MW. The polymer has a
weight average MW of 20,800 Da and a polydispersity of 2.28.
[0110]Inverse Transition Temperature. The optical absorbance at 500 nm of
the ELP biopolymer or poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer was monitored in the
4-80.degree. C. range on a Shimadzu-2001 UV-visible spectrophotometer,
equipped with a water-jacketed optical cell connected to a recirculating
water bath. The T.sub.I was determined from the midpoint of the change in
optical absorbance at 350 nm due to aggregation of ELP or ELP-thioredoxin
fusion protein as a function of temperature at a heating or cooling rate
of 1.3.degree. C. min.sup.-1.
Example 2
Immunoassay with a Thioredoxin-ELP Fusion Protein
[0111]Immunoassays are commonly used to detect analytes such as enzymes,
hormones, drugs, and other molecules of interest in complex biological
mixtures. By definition, an immunoassay relies on the specific binding of
an antigen by an antibody, but assays using other biological high
affinity binding partners (e.g., ligand-cell surface receptor,
inhibitor-enzyme, etc.) can also be employed in an analogous manner. A
number of different immunoassay formats have been developed to detect
and/or quantitate the levels of analytes; for a review of immunoassays,
see PCT Patent Application WO 86/06492.
[0112]Here we report an immunoassay in which one of the reactants (e.g.,
either the antigen or the antibody) is genetically fused to an
elastin-like polypeptide (ELP), which we define as oligomeric
polypeptides composed of the pentapeptide repeat Val-Pro-Gly-X-Gly (where
X, the guest residue, can be any amino acid). ELPs undergo a reversible
phase transition. Below the transition temperature (T.sub.t), the
polypeptide is highly soluble in aqueous solution; But when the solution
temperature is raised above the T.sub.t, the transition occurs, resulting
in aggregation of the polypeptide and partitioning from solution to form
a coacervate phase. The aggregated polypeptide can then be easily and
selectively precipitated from solution by centrifugation or
ultrafiltration. The precipitation is thermally reversible, and upon
subsequently resuspending the precipitated polypeptide in an aqueous
solution at a temperature below the T.sub.t, the precipitate completely
redissolves. The transition is also sharp, taking place over a
1-2.degree. C. range, and can be designed to occur at any temperature
between 0 and 100.degree. C. by precisely specifying the guest residue
sequence and chain length of the ELP polypeptide, variables that can be
exquisitely controlled at the gene level.
[0113]In the assay reported here, the reactants were thioredoxin, a
soluble E. coli protein, and an anti-thioredoxin mouse antibody. A
competitive binding assay was developed in which known amounts of
fluorophore-labeled antibody and thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein were
incubated with unknown amounts of the analyte (unlabeled antibody),
followed by thermally-induced capture of the complex and
spectrofluorimetric analysis.
[0114]One strength of this immunoassay method is that the ELP is fused to
the reactant genetically rather than by chemical conjugation. This is
achieved by joining a gene encoding the polypeptide sequence to a gene of
the reactant protein using the techniques of molecular biology. The
reactant could be a protein antigen, an antibody or antibody fragment, an
enzyme inhibitor, a receptor, or any other protein in an affinity pair of
interest. Once constructed, the fused gene can be used in protein
expression systems to produce the ELP-fused immunoassay reactant.
A. Materials and Methods
[0115]Synthesis of the ELP Gene. A gene encoding a 50 amino acid sequence
was constructed from chemically-synthesized oligonucleotides (Integrated
DNA Technologies, Inc.) using standard molecular biology protocols. The
50 amino acid sequence contained 10 repeats of the pentapeptide VPGXG,
where the guest residues (V, A, and G in a 5:2:3 molar ratio) were
selected to provide in a T.sub.t of 40.degree. C. The gene was
oligomerized end-to-end 15 times by standard molecular biology
techniques, to produce an oligomeric ELP gene encoding a 750 residue
polypeptide.
[0116]Production of Thioredoxin/ELP Fusion. The DNA sequence of pET-32b
(Novagen, Inc.), an expression plasmid containing a gene for thioredoxin,
was modified to include a Sfi I restriction site, which permitted
insertion of the ELP gene downstream of the thioredoxin gene. The
modified plasmid, containing the gene sequence for a thioredoxin-ELP
fusion, was transformed into the E. coli strain BLR(DE3) (Novagen Inc.).
Shaker flask cultures of the transformed cells were incubated at
37.degree. C. to mid-log phase (A.sub.600=0.800). Protein expression was
then induced with 1 mM IPTG, and the cultures were incubated for a
further 3 hours. Cells were lysed by ultrasonication, and the soluble
fusion protein was purified from cell lysate by thermally-induced
aggregation of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein, followed by
centrifugation. The fusion protein was subsequently resolubilized in cold
buffer at a temperature below the T.sub.t. Protein purity was ascertained
by SDS-PAGE, and protein concentration was determined
spetrop
hotometrically (UV-1601, Shimadzu Corp.).
[0117]Anti-Thioredoxin Antibody Preparation. A mouse IgG monoclonal
anti-thioredoxin antibody (gift of David Huston, Baylor College of
Medicine) was conjugated to fluoroscein-5-isothiocyanate (FITC)
(Molecular Probes, Inc.). Labeled antibody was then separated from
unreacted FITC by gel filtration on a Sephadex G-25 column (Pharmacia,
Inc.). The concentration of antibody was determined
spectrophotometrically and by BCA total protein assay (Pierce Chemical
Company). The fluorophore to protein ratio in the FITC-labeled antibody
was approximately 3.0.
[0118]Immunoassay. FITC-labeled antibody and thioredoxin-ELP were each
added to a concentration of 0.5 .mu.M in 50 .mu.l PBS. Free ELP (without
fused thioredoxin) was also added to a final concentration of 15 .mu.M to
facilitate precipitation of the antibody-thioredoxin/ELP complex.
Unlabeled antibody (the analyte) was added to the assay mixture in
varying amounts, with final concentrations ranging from 5 nM to 5 .mu.M.
[0119]The analyte-antibody mixtures were incubated at 37.degree. C. for 1
hour, then heated to 48.degree. C. for five minutes to induce the ELP
phase transition, and then centrifuged warm (T>45.degree. C.) for 10
minutes at 16,000 g. The supernatant was removed, and the pellet was
resuspended in cold PBS. The fluorescence (excitation.sub.max=494 nm,
emission.sub.max=519 nm) of both the supernatant and the resolubilized
precipitate were determined by spectrofluorimetry (SLM-Aminco Inc.).
B. Results and Discussion
[0120]Capture of the FITC-labeled antibody by the thioredoxin-ELP fusion
was demonstrated in two control experiments, one with no specific capture
(FIG. 2a) and one with nearly complete capture (FIG. 2b). These
experiments also allowed the characterization of baseline fluorescence
for both the supernatant and pellet fractions.
[0121]In FIG. 2a, the reaction was set up as described in Methods, except
that both the unlabeled antibody and thioredoxin-ELP were omitted from
the reaction mixture. Because no thioredoxin-ELP was present to capture
the FITC-labeled antibody, the precipitate formed after raising the
temperature above the T.sub.t contained only free ELP. Therefore, the
majority of the fluorescence remained in the supernatant, with only 3.4%
of the total fluorescence observed in the pellet. This small amount of
residual fluorescence, which represents the background fluorescence for
the pellet fraction of the immunoassay, is likely due to incomplete
removal of the supernatant and to non-specific trapping of the labeled
antibody in the aggregated ELP phase.
[0122]In FIG. 2b, a ten-fold greater concentration of thioredoxin-ELP
fusion (5 .mu.M versus 0.5 .mu.M for the standard assay described in
Methods) was added and the unlabeled antibody was omitted. An equilibrium
model of binding predicts that 96% of the labeled antibody should be
bound at this thioredoxin concentration, assuming a K.sub.D of
1.times.10.sup.7 M (independently determined by BIAcore analysis).
However, the fraction of total fluorescence observed in the pellet is
48.4% (when corrected for pellet background fluorescence). We believe
that the residual background fluorescence in the supernatant is from
contaminating mouse IgG antibodies, which are present in mouse ascites
fluid from which the anti-thioredoxin monoclonal antibodies are Protein-A
affinity purified. This is supported by previous experiments in which
residual antibodies, which remained in the supernatant after one round of
capture using thioredoxin-ELP concentrations theoretically sufficient for
complete capture, were not captured in a subsequent experiment by a large
molar excess of thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein. This result indicates
that these residual antibodies do not bind thioredoxin. Hence, if the
pelleted fraction contains 96% of the anti-thioredoxin antibodies, then
the fraction of contaminating antibodies which do not bind thioredoxin is
49.5%, which represents the background fluorescence for the supernatant
fraction of the immunoassay.
[0123]A calibration curve for the immunoassay is shown in FIG. 3. On the
X-axis, the analyte concentration is represented by the ratio of analyte
concentration (unlabeled antibody) to total antibody concentration. Data
points are in decade increments of absolute analyte concentrations,
ranging from 0.005 to 5 .mu.M. On the Y-axis, the assay output signal is
the ratio of the fluorescence intensity of the pellet fraction to the
total fluorescence intensity (i.e., the summed fluorescence intensities
of the pellet and the supernatant). The background fluorescence was
subtracted from the intensities for both the supernatant and pellet.
Because the fluorescence intensity is quantitatively related to the
concentration of the labeled anti-thioredoxin antibody, this ratio is the
fraction of labeled antibody that binds to the thioredoxin-ELP fusion and
is precipitated.
[0124]Qualitatively, the curve indicates that as the fraction of unlabeled
antibody increases, the fraction of labeled antibody bound decreases, as
expected for a competitive binding assay. Conversely, as the fraction of
unlabeled antibody decreases, the fraction of labeled antibody bound
increases, approaching a maximum where no competing unlabeled antibody is
bound. The data exhibits a near linear relationship (R.sup.2=0.993).
However the shape of the curve could be non-linear under other
immunoassay conditions, as described below. Once generated, the
calibration curve can then be used to quantitatively determine the
concentration of unlabeled antibody in unknown samples.
[0125]Two primary parameters by which any immunoassay is judged are
sensitivity and dynamic range. This competitive capture assay has a
maximum sensitivity when the concentration of unlabeled analyte is equal
to that of the competing labeled antibody (i.e., 0.5 on the X-axis in
FIG. 3). As the concentration of unlabeled analyte is decreased or
increased from this point (e.g., moving on the calibration curve left or
right from center), the interval for each successive decade in absolute
concentration of analyte decreases, thereby reducing signal sensitivity.
In this particular case, the immunoassay's maximum sensitivity was
focused on an analyte concentration of 0.5 .mu.M, determined by the
selection of that same concentration for the FITC-labeled antibody. This
center of sensitivity could be shifted, or focused, by simply varying the
labeled antibody concentration. The range over which this shift could be
achieved would be limited in higher concentrations only by the supply of
reagents and in lower concentrations by the antibody's binding affinity.
The antibody affinity, and hence the lower limit for this particular
assay, are as yet undetermined. However, preliminary calculations
indicate that the antibody affinity is on the order 0.1 .mu.M, yielding a
lower limit for the center of sensitivity of approximately the same
magnitude. It is worth noting that this affinity is relatively low when
compared to many antibodies, and therefore significantly lower
concentrations could be measured with immunoassays utilizing higher
affinity binding pairs.
[0126]The dynamic range of a particular immunoassay (that is, the useful
range on either side of a given center of sensitivity) is determined
primarily by the sensitivity of the fluorimeter or other reporter
detection instrumentation. For the data in FIG. 3, the range for the most
highly sensitive concentration measurements spans roughly two orders of
magnitude (ranging from 50 nM to 5 .mu.M). At least two additional orders
of magnitude (one on each end of this range) could be determined with a
sensitivity roughly 10% of that for the central region, for a total range
of 5 nM to 50 .mu.M. The absolute upper and lower limits of the useful
range about the center of sensitivity have not yet been determined
experimentally, but may even exceed this preliminary estimate of four
orders of magnitude.
[0127]Just as the selection of the labeled antibody concentration has
important ramifications on the center of sensitivity, equilibrium models
of competitive binding reveal that the selection of antigen
(thioredoxin-ELP) concentration critically affects the shape of the
calibration curve, as alluded to earlier. Specifically, if the antigen
concentration is higher than the labeled antibody concentration, then the
curve takes on a non-linear shape with a plateau at lower unlabeled
antibody concentrations giving way to a rapid drop-off in signal at
higher antibody concentrations. This results in a significant decrease in
the dynamic range of the assay. On the other hand, as the antigen
concentration becomes smaller than the labeled antibody concentration,
the curve takes on a more linear shape which is also accompanied by an
overall reduction in fraction of total antibody bound and captured, and
hence a reduction in signal sensitivity. The optimum conditions for the
assay, therefore, requires equal concentrations of antigen and labeled
antibody, which produces both a nearly linear curve and maximum
sensitivity. However, this parameter could be varied depending on the
requirements of a particular immunoassay, with high antigen
concentrations used to achieve very high sensitivity over a small dynamic
range, or conversely low antigen concentrations used to achieve a very
broad range with reduced overall sensitivity.
[0128]The precipitation of the ELP-antibody-antigen complex can be induced
by increasing the solution temperature above the T.sub.t, as was done in
the example immunoassay presented here, or by increasing the ionic
strength of the solution, or a combination of both. The T.sub.t of a
given ELP construct is decreased as the ionic strength of the solution is
increased. Therefore, aggregation may be induced isothermally by
increasing the ionic strength such that the ELP T.sub.t is depressed
below the solution temperature. In addition, the ELP phase transition can
also be induced in modified ELP sequences containing appropriate residues
by known changes in pH, or in response to chemical or biochemical
modification (e.g., phosphorylation). Our claim for this immunoassay
therefore covers any physical, chemical, or biological phenomenon that
can induce a phase transition in an ELP sequence or its derivatives.
[0129]Selection of the means of precipitation depends primarily on ease of
use, equipment available, and avoidance of potential deleterious effects
on the reactants. For example, high saline concentrations could interfere
with antibody binding, while high temperatures could cause protein
denaturing. However, sufficient flexibility exists in the design of the
ELP T.sub.t that gentle conditions for precipitation should be obtainable
for any prospective application.
[0130]The ELP-precipitation immunoassay method presented here could be
used in a number of different configurations or formats known to those
skilled in the art. Flexibility in this assay arises from the following
factors, which can be implemented in any combination: either one of the
binding partners can be attached to the ELP, either one of the binding
partners can be reporter-labeled, and either one of the binding partners
can be the analyte. Flexibility can be further expanded by the use of a
secondary antibody ("Indirect assay") or an antibody with a
non-overlapping epitope ("Sandwich"). These configurations simplify the
initial immunoassay reaction and eliminate the need for labeling of the
reagent (which may otherwise reduce affinity), but require a secondary
incubation and precipitation step.
[0131]The only limitation in these configurations is that the antibody
cannot be both fused to an ELP and labeled with a reporter because, in
this configuration, no reporter could ever be captured. Another
requirement for all configurations is that for quantitative detection,
only the analyte (and not its affinity partner) can occur in the unknown
sample.
[0132]Selection of a particular configuration would depend primarily upon
the availability of a gene for one of the binding partners. The
availability of sufficient quantities of reagent as the labeled species
may also be an important consideration. One of the species may not be at
all available as a reagent. In this case, configurations exist for which
the analyte can be previously unknown. This could be useful, for example,
in screening libraries of engineered antibodies for molecules specific to
a particular antigen.
[0133]This immunoassay is also amenable to the measurement of multiple
analytes in a single sample using a set of analyte-binding proteins, each
of which is specific to an analyte of interest. Detection of each analyte
can be achieved by two alternative strategies. In the first approach,
each analyte-binding protein is attached to a distinct reporter (e.g.,
fluorophores with unique excitation and emission properties). The assay
would be performed identically to that for a single analyte, and
independent detection of each analyte would be simultaneously achieved by
monitoring the unique spectroscopic signal for each reporter.
[0134]The alternative approach, a sequential detection scheme, would
utilize fusion of each antigen or antibody to ELPs with different
T.sub.t's. The non-covalent complexes formed would be sequentially and
independently precipitated, thereby allowing separate measurement of each
analyte. This approach requires ELPs with distinct, non-overlapping
T.sub.t's, which can be achieved by a combination of varying the identity
of the guest residue and by varying the ELP molecular weight. We have
previously demonstrated the feasibility of this approach by the synthesis
of ELPs of varying chain length exhibiting different T.sub.t's, and we
can further expand upon the available range of T.sub.t's available by
producing ELPs with different compositions.
[0135]The genetic attachment of the ELP provides several key advantages as
compared to chemically-conjugated, synthetic temperature-sensitive
polymers outlined in patent WO 86/06492. First, this method of
synthesizing the thermally precipitating reagent is technically simpler
and less costly, with no need for separate and often complex synthesis of
the polymer nor for a subsequent chemical conjugation step to couple the
immunoassay reactant to the thermally-responsive polymer. Second, the
genetically-produced ELP is monodisperse, whereas production of synthetic
polymers results in a population of molecules with varying chain lengths.
This heterogeneity may adversely affect the performance of the
immunoassay by, for example, shifting or broadening the range of
temperatures over which the phase transition occurs. Finally, genetic
fusion allows absolute control over the number (typically one) and
location of the ELP(s) in the fusion protein. Chemical conjugation of a
synthetic polymer to a protein, in contrast, usually results in random
attachment of the polymer at conjugation sites located throughout the
primary amino acid sequence of the protein, resulting in varied numbers
and diverse locations of attached polymers. If any of these conjugation
sites are near the binding site, reduction of affinity or complete
blockage of binding results, thereby adversely affecting the performance
of the immunoassay. Furthermore, chemical conjugation of protein and
polymer is inefficient and incomplete, whereas genetic ELP incorporation
insures that every molecule has exactly the same structure and
properties.
[0136]In summary, the immunoassay described herein provides a novel method
for reactions in which at least one of the binding partners is a
recombinant protein. It has important advantages over similar methods in
terms of simplicity and precision of reagent production. It is flexible
and can be utilized in a variety of configurations, and can be readily
automated. Finally, it provides high sensitivity over a wide range of
medically-relevant analyte concentrations.
Example 3
Sensor Regeneration with a Thioredoxin-ELP Fusion Protein
[0137]This examples shows that an environmentally-responsive polypeptide
tag can be introduced into a model protein by genetic engineering, that
the polypeptide tag allows the fusion protein to adsorb to a hydrophobic
surface, and that the fusion protein can be desorbed from the surface by
altering the solvation of the protein in response to an environmental
signal, thereby allowing regeneration of the surface back to the
protein-free substrate. This approach is generic for the following
reasons: first, the introduction of environmentally-triggered properties
in a target protein simply involves gene-level N or --C-terminal fusion
of the peptide codons into a cloned or synthetic gene, which is easily
achieved by standard molecular biology manipulations. Second, fusion
proteins containing this polypeptide tag are rendered
environmentally-responsive, and this appears to be a fairly general
phenomena. Finally, the polypeptide tag can be chemically conjugated to
molecules that are not genetically-encodable, thereby creating an
environmentally-responsive bioconjugate that can be reversibly adsorbed
and desorbed by small changes in solution conditions.
A. Experimental Details
[0138]Solution Inverse Transition. The optical absorbance at 350 nm of the
thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein was monitored in the 4-60.degree. C. range
on a Cary Bio-300 UV-visible spectrophotometer, equipped with a
multi-cell peltier temperature controller. The T.sub.I was determined
from the midpoint of the change in optical absorbance at 350 nm due to
aggregation of ELP or thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein as a function of
temperature at a heating or cooling rate of 1-1.5.degree. C. min.sup.-1.
[0139]Substrate Preparation: Gold substrate were prepared by thermal
evaporation of 50 .ANG. Cr on a silicon wafer (for ellipsometry) or glass
slide (for BIACORE instrument measurements) followed by 500 .ANG. gold.
The gold substrate were cleaned in a 1:1:3 solution of
NH.sub.4OH:H.sub.2O.sub.2:H.sub.2O and incubated overnight in a 1 mM
solution of hexadecanethiol in ethanol to form a self-assembled monolayer
(SAM) on gold. The SAMs were sonicated in ethanol for 1 min, dried under
nitrogen and used immediately thereafter. Advancing water contact angle
of the SAMs were .about.100.degree.. for the hydrophobic SAM of
hexadecanethiol.
[0140]In situ Ellipsometry. The SAMs were mounted on the ellipsometer
stage in a cuvet and the cuvet was filled with 50 mM phosphate, pH 7.4, 1
M NaCl. The polarizer and analyzer angle of the thiol-functionalized gold
substrate were measured in buffer and converted to ellipsometric
parameters (.psi., .DELTA.). Next, a concentrated stock solution of
thioredoxin/ELP fusion protein was pipetted into the cuvet to a final
concentration of 1 .mu.M. The time course of adsorption of the fusion
protein on SAM-functionalized gold substrates was examined by in situ
ellipsometry as the ELP underwent a hydrophilic-hydrophobic transition as
the temperature was raised from 15-40.degree. C. at .about.1.degree. C.
min.sup.-1. The ellipsometer cuvet was heated and cooled by an immersion
coil connected to a thermally programmable (-20-100.degree. C.)
recirculating water bath. The in situ temperature of the buffer in the
cuvet was measured by a thermocouple at each time point for which
ellipsometric parameters were measured. The polarizer and analyzer angles
were monitored through the thermal ramp on the upward and downward cycle
and were used in a nonlinear regression simulation program to obtain
thickness and complex refractive indices for the silicon substrate,
silicon oxide, gold, SAM, and protein overlayers. Effective thickness of
the protein adlayer was calculated assuming a protein refractive index of
1.45.
[0141]BIACORE.TM. Instrument Analysis: Typically, a gold-coated glass
slide was mounted in an empty BIACORE.TM. sensor cartridge using
water-insoluble double-sided sticky tape. The sensor cartridge was docked
into a BIACORE X.TM. instrument system, and a system check was performed
to ensure the absence of leaks in the fluid path and minimal baseline
drift. The cartridge was then removed from the instrument and cooled to
low temperature (approximately -20.degree. C.). The sensor surface was
incubated with 1 .mu.M thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein in 2 M NaCl at
.about.4.degree. C., warmed to room temperature to allow the fusion
protein to undergo the phase transition, and adsorbed to the sensor
surface for 5 min. Excess protein was washed away with buffered 2M NaCl
at room temperature and the sensor cartridge was then reinserted into the
BIACORE X.TM. instrument, which was maintained at 35.degree. C. All
buffers used for BIACORE.TM. instrument measurements were 50 mM potassium
phosphate, pH 7.4 of varying NaCl concentrations.
B. Results and Discussion.
[0142]Design of ELP Carrier. Based on previous studies that have
delineated the effect of varying the identity of the fourth, guest
residue (X) in the repeat unit, and its mole fraction on the T.sub.I, a
gene was synthesized encoding an ELP sequence with guest residues Val
(V), Ala (A), and Gly (G) in the ratio 5:2:3 in accordance with the
procedures described in Example 1 above to provide a solution T.sub.I in
water of 37.degree. C. By adjusting the sequence length, as well as its
composition, we can design sequences that undergo the inverse transition
at any temperature between 0 and 100.degree. C. The ELP-1 mer (50 amino
acids) was oligomerized to produce a library of ELP oligomers at the gene
level. The 18-mer was chosen as a carrier polypeptide in the first
generation expression vector, based on its experimentally-observed
T.sub.I.
[0143]Inverse Transition of Thioredoxin-ELP Fusion Protein in Solution.
The inverse transition of thioredoxin-ELP 18-mer fusion protein (25 .mu.M
fusion protein in 50 mM phosphate, 1 M NaCl) as a function of temperature
(1.5.degree. C. min.sup.-1 heating rate) is shown in FIG. 4. With the
exception of a higher concentration of fusion protein, these experimental
conditions are identical to those used for surface regeneration. As the
temperature was raised, the turbidity of the solution,
spectrophotometrically monitored by the absorbance at 350 nm, stayed
constant up to a certain temperature. Further increase in temperature
resulted in a sharp (<2.degree. C.) increase in the turbidity to a
maximum value, due to aggregation of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein.
The inverse transition temperature (T.sub.I) is defined as the midpoint
of the spectrophotometrically observed transition. The
experimentally-observed T.sub.I of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion was
25.degree. C., which was identical to that of the ELP with no fusion
partner (results for ELP not shown), demonstrating that the inverse
transition of the ELP was not affected by conjugation to thioredoxin.
This process was reversible with slight hysteresis, and the aggregated
fusion protein could be resolubilized completely by lowering the
temperature below the T.sub.I. The thioredoxin control exhibited no
change in absorbance with increasing temperature. We also observed
complete retention of thioredoxin activity after several rounds of
thermal cycling. These results validate our first hypothesis, that the
inverse transition of the ELP sequence is retained upon its expression in
a fusion protein, and that the ELP tag does not compromise the activity
of the target protein, which is critical for biosensor applications.
[0144]Surface Binding and Regeneration of Thioredoxin-ELP Fusion Protein.
This experiment was designed to investigate the hypothesis that
desolvation of the ELP sequence upon raising the temperature above its
T.sub.I will drive a protein to the surface via hydrophobic interactions
between the desolvated, hydrophobic ELP sequence and the hydrophobic
surface. Subsequently, upon lowering the temperature below the T.sub.I,
the ELP sequence solvates and becomes hydrophilic, which should lead to
spontaneous desorption of the ELP fusion protein from the surface.
[0145]The adsorption of the fusion protein on the hydrophobic SAM was
examined by in situ ellipsometry as the ELP underwent a
hydrophilic-hydrophobic transition in 50 mM phosphate, 1 M NaCl as the
temperature was raised from 15-40.degree. C. at a rate of 1.degree. C.
min.sup.-1. The polarizer and analyzer angles were monitored through the
temperature ramp. FIG. 5 shows the change in thickness of the protein
adlayer as a function of temperature, calculated by nonlinear regression
using the measured values of the polarizer and analyzer angles. The
increase in adlayer thickness with increasing temperature clearly shows
that as the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein undergoes its inverse
transition, it adsorbs to the hydrophobic SAM during the upward thermal
ramp. The observed inverse transition of the ELP on the hydrophobic
surface is broader than the equivalent bulk transition. The ELP forms a
stable adlayer on the hydrophobic surface above the transition
temperature. Upon lowering the temperature to .about.20.degree. C., the
adsorbed thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein desorbs from the surface.
Desorption is essentially complete as seen by the <5 .ANG. change in
surface thickness after one thermal cycle.
[0146]In separate experiments, we have established that the adsorbed
protein completely desorbs from the surface, if the maximum temperature
in the cuvet is kept below 40.degree. C. This process can be repeated
several times with virtually no irreversibility. A control experiment
with thioredoxin alone, showed little adsorption of thioredoxin in the
time scale of the experiment, and all of it was irreversible. This
experiment demonstrates the reversible adsorption/desorption of an ELP
fusion protein in response to a thermal stimulus.
[0147]Analyte Binding and Surface Regeneration by Surface Plasmon
Resonance. The objective of this set of experiments was to demonstrate
that adsorbed thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein can bind to an analyte,
anti-thioredoxin mAb, and that the antibody-fusion protein complex can be
desorbed after binding. This objective can be achieved if the following
can be demonstrated: [0148]1) Thioredoxin is exposed to the bulk after
immobilization of the ELP-thioredoxin fusion protein. [0149]2) A
monoclonal antibody against thioredoxin can bind to the
surface-immobilized thioredoxin. [0150]3) The thioredoxin-ELP/antibody
complex remains immobilized above the phase transition over time.
[0151]4) Thioredoxin-ELP/antibody complex can be desorbed from the
surface upon lowering the temperature below the phase transition
temperature.
[0152]The BIACORE.TM. device divides the sensor surface into two channels
which can be addressed individually. This allows use of one channel as a
reference, and all signals presented here are difference signals between
channel 1 (measurement) and channel 2 (reference). As shown in FIG. 6,
the bare surface [A] has a signal difference between channel 1 and
channel 2 of about 530 Response Units (RU). This is due to small
variations in substrate preparation. At time [1] the sensor surface, to
which the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein is adsorbed above the T.sub.I
outside the instrument is inserted [B] and a slight increase in signal
difference to about 725 RU is found, which may be due to the insertion
process. The reference channel 2 is then rinsed with pure water for 5
minutes [2] which removes the adsorbed thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein
from the sensor surface in this channel. The signal difference [C] of
about 3300 RU corresponds to the amount of adsorbed thioredoxin-ELP
fusion protein in channel 1. At high salt concentration, 2 M NaCl in the
running buffer, the signal is stable, but antibody binding is
inefficient. Therefore the salt concentration in the running buffer was
reduced to 1 M NaCl [3], which leads to a slow desorption [D] of about
20% of the protein in about 1000 sec. The stable desorption rate is about
0.4 RU/sec.
[0153]Anti-thioredoxin binding. Channel 1 is selectively incubated with 50
.mu.l anti-thioredoxin mAb (1:10 dilution) in running buffer [4]. The
signal increases by about 1600 RU [E] indicating strong antibody binding.
Upon completion of binding, only the time-dependent desorption at a rate
of 0.4 RU/sec is observed.
[0154]Desorption. The sensor temperature can be changed in the BiacoreX,
and although the temperature change is not linear with time, the
temperature is measured at the sensor surface, and can be monitored as a
function of time. Upon lowering the temperature [5] from 35.degree. C. to
18.degree. C. the signal decreases [F] to approximately the same level
(400 RU) as the bare sensor surface. FIG. 7 shows the desorption process
as a function of temperature.
[0155]These experiments demonstrate that a thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein
adsorbs to a hydrophobic surface and can be desorbed completely by a
small change of environmental conditions. The observation that after
adsorption of the fusion protein, thioredoxin binds to an
anti-thioredoxin mAb, suggests that the water soluble thioredoxin exposed
to the bulk and accessible to its antibody. The immobilized complex is
stable at the surface; in a separate experiment with a running buffer
containing 2 M NaCl, after mAb binding, the SPR was stable to within 0.08
RU/sec over several hours, though the affinity for antibody binding is
reduced at these salt concentrations (data not shown). Together, these
independent experiments show that the noncovalent complex of fusion
protein and antibody can be immobilized on the surface with high
stability. Finally, the complex can be desorbed completely from the
surface by lowering the temperature below the phase transition
temperature (aim 4).
[0156]These data indicate the feasibility of creating a regenerable
surface with the desired sensing specificity in accordance with the
present invention. We believe that our approach to sensor regeneration is
powerful and generic. This is because an analyte-binding protein for
biosensor applications can easily be produced as a fusion with an ELP tag
using standard molecular biology methods with no loss of functional
activity. For other molecules which cannot be produced as a
genetically-encoded fusion with an ELP, including proteins for which a
cloned or synthetic gene is unavailable, the ELP tag can be chemically or
biochemically-conjugated to the target molecule. Creating a reversible
biosensor surface then only requires a hydrophobic surface, which is also
easily achieved by a variety of surface functionalization methods,
including SAMs on gold, silane modification of glass or oxidized silicon,
or any other method that provides a hydrophobic surface. Combined, the
environmentally-triggered, reversible interaction of an ELP fusion
protein and a hydrophobic surface allows facile regeneration of
biosensors.
Example 4
Targeted Delivery of Therapeutics to Solid Tumors by Thermally Responsive
Polymers
[0157]Because targeting is necessary for efficient tumor localization of
systemically-delivered therapeutics, we propose a thermal targeting
scheme, where a thermally-responsive drug carrier precipitates in regions
of elevated temperature.
[0158]Polymers that undergo an inverse temperature transition are useful
as drug carriers for thermal targeting because they are soluble in
aqueous solutions below their inverse transition temperature (T.sub.I),
but when the temperature is raised above their T.sub.I, they undergo a
narrow phase transition within a 2-3.degree. C. range, leading to
extensive desolvation and aggregation. Elastin-like protein (ELP)
biopolymers [D. Urry, J. Prot. Chem. 7: 1-34 (1988); D. Urry, Prog.
Biophys. Molec. Biol. 57: 23-57 (1992)] and copolymers of
poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (poly(NIPAAm)) [H. Schihld; Protg. Polym.
Sci. 17: 163-249 (1992); C. Chiklis and J. Grasshof, J. Polym. Sci. Part
A-2 8: 1617 (1970); L. Taylor and L. Cerankowski, J. Polym. Sci. Polym.
Chem. 13: 2551 (1975); Y. Takei, Bioconj. Chem. 4: 42 (1993)] are two
polymer systems that can be designed to display this behavior slightly
above physiological temperature. ELP biopolymers can be designed to
exhibit a T.sub.I within a <2.degree. C. range between 0-100.degree.
C. by specifying the identity and fraction of the fourth residue [D. Urry
et al., J. Am. Chem. Soc. 113: 4346 (1991)]. Chemically synthesized
copolymers of NIPAAm and alkylacrylamides, display a similar phase
transition, the midpoint of which can similarly be tuned by varying the
fraction of the NIPAAm monomer. To date, neither of these polymers have
been utilized as radionuclide carriers for targeted drug delivery by
hyperthermia.
A. Methods
[0159]Gene synthesis, oligomerization, protein expression, purification,
Poly (NIPAAm) synthesis and inverse transition temperature
characterization are described in Example 1 above.
[0160]Conjugation of Fluorophore. Approximately 11 milligrams of
thrombin-cleaved ELP-15 mer or the poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer were
resuspended in 1 ml 100 mM sodium bicarbonate buffer, pH 8.34. 40 .mu.l
of Rhodamine Red-X.TM. succinimidyl ester (10 mg/ml in DMF) was added and
incubated with gentle agitation for 2 hours at room temperature. After
incubation, the sample was centrifuged at 10,000 g for 5 min. to remove
insoluble matter. The supernatant was then thermally purified by adding
NaCl to 500 mM, heating to 35.degree. C., and centrifugation at
T.gtoreq.35.degree. C. at 10,000 g for 5 minutes. The supernatant was
removed, the pellet was resuspended in cold PBS, and centrifuged cold.
The resolubilized conjugate was retained. The thermal purification was
repeated twice. Conjugation efficiency for the ELP 15-mer was determined
by BCA total protein assay and by rhodamine absorption at 570 nm.
[0161]Tumor Vascular Preparation. A small volume (.about.0.1 mm.sup.3) of
tumor tissue (human ovarian carcinoma; SKOV-3) was implanted in the
dorsal skin flap window chamber in nude mice. The implanted tumors were
used 10-15 days after surgery, when the tumor in the window chamber was
2-3 mm in diameter. The implanted tumors in the window chamber can be
placed under a microscope so that the injected material of interest can
be directly visualized in the vascular and interstitial compartments and
its concentration can be directly measured.
[0162]Experimental Procedure for Mouse Window Chamber Technique. In each
experiment, a mouse was anesthetized with sodium pentobarbital. The tail
vein was cannulated to allow injection of the Rhodamine-ELP conjugate.
After cannulation, the animal was placed on a temperature-controlled
microscope stage to maintain normal body temperature throughout the
experiment. The tumor in the window chamber was observed with a 20.times.
objective. A region of the preparation was selected such that blood flow
appeared to be normal and did not have any other blood vessels below it.
Images of the selected region were recorded by a SIT camera connected to
a S-VHS recorder under epifluorescent illumination before injection of
the ELP-Rhodamine conjugate. After injection of the conjugate (t=0), the
image from the selected region was recorded every 2 min. for 5 sec over a
duration of 40 min. The videotape was analyzed by image processing
software (NIH Image) on an IBM-compatible-PC. At any time, the light
intensity of the entire tissue area I.sub.t, and a representative
vascular region (I.sub.v) and interstitial region (I.sub.i) were analyzed
to provide the time dependence of I.sub.v and I.sub.i.
B. Results
[0163]Design, Synthesis, Purification, and Characterization of ELP
Biopolymer and Poly(NIPAAm/AAm) Copolymer. The transition temperature of
an ELP biopolymer is strongly influenced by the hydrophobicity of the
guest residue (X) and its mole fraction f.sub.x. Therefore, by varying
the identity of guest residues, and their mole fraction, ELP copolymers
can be designed to exhibit a predetermined inverse transition temperature
in a 0-100.degree. C. range. Based on these previous studies, a synthetic
gene for the monomer, which encodes 10 VPGXG repeats, was designed to
incorporate guest residues: X=valine (V), alanine (A), and glycine (G) in
the ratio 5:2:3 to achieve a T.sub.I of 42.degree. C. Standard molecular
biology procedures were used to construct the synthetic gene of the ELP
monomer, and to oligomerize the gene to create a library ranging from 1
to 18-mer where each monomer contains 50 residues.
[0164]In initial studies, the ELP 6-, 9-, 12- and 18-mers were expressed
in E. coli in a modified pET-32b expression vector as a fusion with
thioredoxin. Each fusion protein retained the reversible phase transition
of the ELP sequence, which allowed one-step thermal purification of the
thioredoxin-ELP fusion from all other soluble E. coli contaminants. The
amino acid sequence of the fusion protein has a recognition site specific
to thrombin, located between thioredoxin and the ELP sequence. Cleavage
with thrombin at this site liberated the ELP from the fusion protein.
Thermal precipitation of the ELP was then used to purify the ELP from
other proteins. Because the thermally-induced aggregation of ELP
biopolymer is completely reversible in vitro, the ELP was then
solubilized for subsequent experiments by simply lowering the temperature
below its T.sub.I. The observation that the thioredoxin fusion protein
containing a C-terminal ELP sequence also exhibits an inverse transition
indistinguishable from the ELP sequence alone is exciting, because it
indicates that thermal targeting will also be applicable to the delivery
of protein therapeutics to tumors.
[0165]The thermal behavior of the ELP 6, 9, and 18-mer (MWs=24.3 kDa, 35.9
kDa, and 71 kDa, respectively) in PBS ranged from 58.7.degree. C. to
35.1.degree. C. is shown in FIG. 8, and reveals a strong inverse relation
between MW and T.sub.I, which is consistent with previous observations of
Urry and colleagues for ELPs with MWs<100 kDa. Interpolation of these
results suggested that an ELP 15-mer (MW.about.50 KDa) would allow the
target T.sub.I of 40-42.degree. C. to be achieved with the current ELP
composition, containing guest residues Val:Ala:Gly in a 5:2:3 ratio.
[0166]The ELP 15-mer was then synthesized and purified in mg quantities.
FIG. 9 displays the thermal behavior of the ELP 12-mer in physiological
saline. The T.sub.I of the ELP 15-mer, defined as the midpoint of the
experimentally-observed inverse transition, is 42.5.degree. C. The
inverse transition of this polymer occurs over a narrow, <3.degree. C.
range, which is important for hyperthermic targeting. While the first
generation ELP 15-mer construct will be useful for in vivo radionuclide
delivery, it would be desirable to have in hand additional constructs
with MWs in the 10-30 kDa range with a T.sub.I of 40.degree. C., in order
to explore the relationship between ELP MW and radionuclide
biodistribution. Based on previous studies by Urry et al., the
Val:Ala:Gly ratio is decreased to 5:1:1 to yield a polymer of 25 kDa MW
and a T.sub.I of 40.degree. C. and is useful in the same manner as
described above.
[0167]The thermal behavior of the poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer is also shown
in FIG. 9, and clearly demonstrates that the inverse transition occurs in
a narrow, 2.degree. C. range, and that the T.sub.I is 41.degree. C. The
copolymer contains one amine end group per polymer chain for conjugation
of amine-reactive radionuclides. Future rounds of synthesis can be
carried out to provide a library of copolymers with MWs in the 10-50 kDa
range by adjusting the concentration of initiator and chain transfer
agent relative to monomer. If required, after synthesis the polymers can
be fractionated by size to provide polymers with a specified MW and
polydispersity.
[0168]Characterization of Rhodamine-Polymer Conjugates. The thermal
behavior of the ELP 15-mer and its conjugate with Rhodamine is shown in
FIG. 10. The conjugation of Rhodamine to the ELP 15-mer results in a
decrease in the T.sub.I from 43.degree. C. to 40.degree. C. This is
consistent with the increased hydrophobicity of the conjugate, which
should result in a decrease in the observed T.sub.I. Similarly,
conjugation of Rhodamine to the poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer also results
in a decrease in the T.sub.I of the conjugate, but the magnitude
(.about.1.degree. C.) is slightly smaller than that observed for the ELP.
[0169]Fluorophore Targeting Study: Dorsal Skin Flap Window Model. Equal
amounts of Rhodamine-labeled ELP-12 mer (1.1 mg, 200 .mu.l) or
poly(NIPAAm) were injected into nude mice bearing subcutaneous ovarian
cancer tumors (SKOV-3) at normothermic and hyperthermic temperature into
two animals. In one experiment, the window chamber was maintained at
normothermic temperature (34.degree. C.), while in the second experiment,
the window chamber containing the implanted s.c tumor was heated to
42.degree. C. Results from these two experiments are shown in FIGS. 11a
and 11b. Over a period of 40 min., the fluorescence in the vasculature
remains constant and approximately equal at both 34.degree. C. and
42.degree. C. However, a significant difference is observed in the
interstitial concentration of the Rhodamine-ELP conjugate. At 42.degree.
C., the fluorescence intensity is four-fold higher than at 34.degree. C.
These results clearly indicate that the ELP is able to extravasate out of
the tumor endothelium and preferentially accumulates in the interstitium
at 42.degree. C. as compared to 34.degree. C. FIG. 12 also shows the
qualitative difference between the behavior of the ELP conjugate at the
two different temperatures. FIG. 12a is a captured image of the tumor
under hyperthermic conditions (42.degree. C.), and FIG. 12b is a
fluorescence image for the normothermic control (34.degree. C.). At
42.degree. C., fluorescent aggregates are clearly visible in the tumor
microvasculature, whereas in the control, normothermic animal, no such
aggregates are visible, indicating that the ELP conjugate selectively
precipitates in the tumor microvasculature at 42.degree. C. These results
are consistent with our in vitro experiments, which demonstrated that the
T.sub.I of the Rhodamine-ELP conjugate was 39.degree. C. Similar results
were also obtained for a Rhodamine-poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer (results
not shown).
C. Conclusions
[0170]This example demonstrates that:
[0171](1) Two different classes of polymers have been synthesized that
display thermally-responsive behavior in the range of 40-42.degree. C. in
physiological saline, a temperature range that is clinically relevant for
hyperthermia. The two polymers are (a) an artificial polypeptide, based
on a pentapeptide repeat found in elastin, and (b) a poly(NIPAAm/AAm)
copolymer. The thermally-responsive behavior is manifested as a
solubility-insolubility transition, where the polymer is soluble below
the T.sub.i, and insoluble above the T.sub.i.
[0172](2) In vitro, we have also demonstrated that this transition is
reversible, so that the polymers can be cycled between their soluble and
insoluble states as a function of temperature.
[0173](3) For the ELP polymers, we have demonstrated that upon fusion of
an ELP with another protein the thermally-responsive behavior is
retained, and is identical to that observed for the ELP alone. This
clearly indicates that protein therapeutics can be synthesized in vivo as
fusion protein with an ELP carrier, thereby obviating the need for
post-expression chemical conjugation.
[0174](4) Both classes of polymers have been synthesized to contain a
specified number of reactive groups so as to allow conjugation of
fluorophores, radionuclides, and drugs. We conjugated a fluorophore,
Rhodamine, both to the ELP and to the poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer. The
fluorophore-polymer conjugate conjugated demonstrated a similar T.sub.I
(within 1-3.degree. C.) of the unconjugated polymer. This decrease in the
T.sub.I after conjugation was addressed by selecting a polymer with a
T.sub.I slightly higher than optimal for hyperthermia, i.e., between
42-45.degree. C., so that upon conjugation, the T.sub.I of the conjugate
is then in the range of 40-42.degree. C.
[0175](5) The delivery of the thermally-responsive ELP and
poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer was investigated with and without
hyperthermia. Aggregation and precipitation of both the ELP and the
poly(NIPAAm/AAm) copolymer was clearly observed in the tumor window under
hyperthermic conditions. No aggregation was observed in the tumor window
of normothermic, control mice. Quantitative analysis of the time course
of vascular and interstitial concentration of the thermally-responsive
polymers showed that upon application of hyperthermia, the interstitial
concentration of the ELP was enhanced by a factor of 250% in a 40 min
period of hyperthermia over that observed for the normothermic control.
We conclude that enhanced delivery of therapeutics can be achieved by
conjugation to thermally-responsive macromolecule carriers in concert
with the targeted application of hyperthermia to tumors.
Example 5
Thermodynamically Addressable Reversible Adsorption of Elastin Fusion
Proteins: A New Method to Dynamically Pattern Proteins on Preformed
Surface Templates by Switchable Interactions
[0176]This example shows that in response to its environmentally triggered
hydrophilic-hydrophobic phase transition, the elastin-like polypeptide
(ELP) drives the adsorption of a thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein onto a
hydrophobic SAM, patterned against a background, hydrophilic SAM. The
fusion protein can be subsequently desorbed from the surface by
resolvation of the ELP tag by reversing the phase transition, thereby
allowing regeneration of the surface. We call this method to dynamically
pattern proteins, thermodynamically addressable reversible patterning of
proteins (TRAP). TRAP also enables patterning of a biomolecule specific
to the patterned protein by exploiting molecular recognition of the
patterned protein by its biomolecular ligand. We demonstrate that the
patterned thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein displays selective binding for
its ligand, a monoclonal antibody specific to thioredoxin
(anti-thioredoxin), thereby enabling the antibody to be patterned onto
the patterned fusion protein. After binding of the antibody to the
surface, the bound complex can be desorbed from the surface by reversing
the phase transition of the ELP. The ability to reversibly pattern a
protein and its noncovalent complex by TRAP will, we believe find
application in biomaterials, biosensors, and proteomic arrays.
A. Experimental Section
[0177]ELP Gene Synthesis. A gene encoding a 50 amino acid sequence was
constructed from chemically synthesized oligonucleotides (Integrated DNA
Technologies, Inc.) using standard molecular biology protocols. The 50
amino acid sequence contained 10 repeats of the pentapeptide VPGXG, where
the guest residues (V, A, and G in a 5:2:3 molar ratio) were selected to
provide in T.sub.t of 40.degree. C. in water at a concentration of 40
mg/ml. The gene was oligomerized head-to-tail 18 times by standard
molecular biology techniques, to produce an oligomeric ELP gene encoding
a 900 residue polypeptide.
[0178]B. Synthesis of Thioredoxin/ELP Fusion. The DNA sequence of pET-32b
(Novagen, Inc.), an expression plasmid containing a gene for thioredoxin,
was modified to include a Sfi I restriction site, which permitted
insertion of the ELP gene downstream of the thioredoxin gene. The
modified plasmid, containing the gene sequence for the thioredoxin-ELP
fusion, was transformed into the E. coli strain BLR(DE3) (Novagen Inc.).
Shaker flask cultures of the transformed cells were incubated at
37.degree. C. to mid-log phase (A.sub.600=0.8). Protein expression was
then induced with 1 mM isopropyl-.beta.-thiogalactopyranoside, and the
cultures were incubated for a further 3 h. Cells were lysed by
ultrasonication, and the soluble fusion protein was purified from cell
lysate by thermally induced aggregation of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion
protein, followed by centrifugation to separate the thioredoxin-ELP
fusion protein from contaminating E. coli proteins. The fusion protein
was subsequently resolubilized in cold buffer at a temperature below the
T.sub.t. Protein purity was ascertained by SDS-PAGE, and the
concentration of the fusion protein was determined spectrophotometrically
by its absorbance at 280 nm (UV-1601, Shimadzu Corp.).
[0179]Conjugation of Fluorophores. A mouse IgG monoclonal anti-thioredoxin
antibody (gift of David Huston, Baylor College of Medicine) was
conjugated to fluoroscein-5-isothiocyanate (FITC) (Molecular Probes,
Inc.) using the standard isothiocyanate coupling protocol provided by the
supplier. Labeled antibody was then separated from unreacted FITC by gel
filtration on a Sephadex G-25 column (Pharmacia, Inc.). The concentration
of antibody was determined spectrophotometrically and by a BCA total
protein assay (Pierce Chemical Company). The fluorophore to protein ratio
in the FITC-labeled antibody was approximately 3.0.
[0180]Thioredoxin-ELP was labeled with Alexa.TM.488 as follows: 1 ml of
thioredoxin-ELP (1.36 mg/ml) in PBS with 0.1M NaHCO.sub.3 was added to a
vial containing a ten fold molar excess of Alexa.TM.488
N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) ester (Molecular Probes). After incubation for
1 h with stirring at a room temperature, unreacted Alexa488 NHS ester
were inactivated by adding hydroxylamine. The conjugated thioredoxin-ELP
fusion protein and unreacted protein) was separated from free fluorophore
by addition of 1.5 M NaCl to isothermally induce the ELP phase
transition. The aggregated fusion protein was separated from free
fluorophore by centrifugation, and resolubilized in PBS at room
temperature. This process was repeated twice. Final labeling mole ratio
of Alexa 488 to ELP was .about.2, determined by the absorption at 494 nm
for Alexa488 (.epsilon.=71,000 M.sup.-1cm.sup.-1) and at 280 nm for
ELP-Trx (.epsilon.=19,870 M.sup.-1cm.sup.-1).
[0181]Solution Characterization of Thioredoxin-ELP Fusion. The optical
density of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein was monitored at 350 nm as
a function of temperature, at a rate of 1.degree. C. min.sup.-1, in an
UV-vis spectrop
hotometer (Varian, Cary Bio-300) equipped with a
thermoelectrically controlled multiple cell holder. The
temperature-dependent aggregation behavior of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion
protein was characterized by its inverse transition temperature
(T.sub.t), which is defined as the temperature at which the optical
density at 350 nm is 5% of the maximum optical density at that
wavelength.
[0182]Preparation of Patterned SAMs on Gold. Thin Gold Films were Prepared
by thermal evaporation of 50 .ANG. Cr on a silicon wafer (for
ellipsometry) or glass slide (for Biacore measurements) followed by 500
.ANG. gold (Biacore analysis) and 2000 .ANG. (elliposmtery). Thin gold
films for SPR analysis (12 mm.times.12 mm) were also obtained from
Biacore Inc. The gold substrate obtained from Biacore Inc. were cleaned
in Piranha solution--a mixture of 30% H.sub.2O.sub.2 and 70%
H.sub.2SO.sub.4 (v/v) at 80.degree. C. for 10 min, and subsequently in a
5:1:1 (v/v) mixture of H.sub.2O, H.sub.2O.sub.2 and NH.sub.3 at
80.degree. C. for 10 min. The gold substrates prepared in house were
cleaned in a 1:1:3 solution of NH.sub.4OH:H.sub.2O.sub.2:H.sub.2O.
[0183]For solution self assembly of SAMs onto gold, a freshly prepared and
cleaned gold film was incubated overnight in a 1 mM solution of
hexadecanethiol (HDT, Aldrich) or 11-mercapto-1-undecanol (MUOH, Aldrich)
in ethanol. The SAMs were then sonicated in ethanol for 1 min, dried
under nitrogen and used immediately thereafter. For .mu.CP, a cotton swab
was wetted with a solution of hexadecanethiol (HDT, 1 mM in ethanol,
Aldrich Chemical Co.) and dragged once across the face of a
plasma-oxidized polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) stamp. Details of the
fabrication of the PDMS stamps with micrometer size relief features have
been reported elsewhere (ref). The stamp was dried with a stream of
nitrogen for 10 s and placed gently on the cleaned gold substrate. After
2 min, the stamp was removed from the gold substrate. The printed gold
substrate was immersed immediately in a solution of MUOH, for 2 min and
rinsed with ethanol. The patterned gold substrate was further cleaned
with ethanol for 5 min in an ultrasonic water bath and dried in a stream
of nitrogen.
[0184]Ellipsometry. A manual nulling ellipsometer, built in house, was
used for all ellipsometric measurements. A He--Ne laser (632.8 nm, Melles
Griot) incident at an angle of 68.25 was used as the light source for
intensity as well as for imaging ellipsometry. Polarizer angles were
determined with a precision of 0.01 and the intensity was measured with a
lock-in amplifier (Princeton Applied Research, Princeton, N.J.).
[0185]Ex Situ Ellipsometry. Before adsorption of thioredoxin-ELP fusion
protein, the thickness of HDT and MUOH SAMs on gold were separately
measured by ellipsometry. Then, the gold substrates presenting HDT and
MUOH SAMs were immersed into 2 ml of PBS solution containing 1 .mu.M
thioredoxin-ELP, and NaCl was dissolved in the solution. After incubation
for 10 min, the substrate was rinsed with water several times and dried
in a stream of nitrogen. The thickness of HDT and MUOH SAMs on gold were
measured again to examine the reversibility of adsorption of
thioredoxin-ELP on HDT and MUOH SAMs on gold. A similar experiment was
performed with 1 .mu.M Alexa 488 labeled as a control. Ellipsometric
constants of the substrate were measured in air before and after
modification with SAMs and adsorption of protein. The thicknesses of the
films were calculated using a parallel slab model with assumed refractive
indices of 1.0 for air and 1.5 for the SAMs and 1.45 for the
thiroedoxin-ELP fusion protein.
[0186]In situ Ellipsometry. The SAMs were mounted on the ellipsometer
stage in a cuvet and the cuvet was filled with 50 mM phosphate, pH 7.4, 1
M NaCl. The polarizer and analyzer angle of the thiol-functionalized gold
substrate were measured in buffer and converted to ellipsometric
parameters (.psi., .DELTA.). Next, a concentrated stock solution of
thioredoxin/ELP fusion protein was pipetted into the cuvet to a final
concentration of 1 .mu.M. The time course of adsorption of the fusion
protein on SAM-functionalized gold substrates was examined by in situ
ellipsometry as the ELP underwent a hydrophilic-hydrophobic transition as
NaCl was added to the cuvet. The polarizer and analyzer angles were
monitored after each increment of NaCl and were used in a nonlinear
regression simulation program to obtain thickness and complex refractive
indices for the silicon substrate, silicon oxide, gold, SAM, and protein
overlayers. Effective thickness of the protein adlayer was calculated
assuming a protein refractive index of 1.45.
[0187]SPR Analysis. Typically, an HDT SAM on a gold-coated glass slide was
mounted in an empty Biacore sensor cartridge using water-insoluble
double-sided sticky tape. The sensor cartridge was docked into a BiacoreX
SPR instrument, and a system check was performed to ensure the absence of
leaks in the fluid path and minimal baseline drift. The cartridge was
then removed from the instrument and cooled to low temperature
(-20.degree. C.). The sensor surface was incubated with 1 .mu.M
thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein in 2 M NaCl at .about.4.degree. C., warmed
to room temperature to allow the fusion protein to undergo the phase
transition; and adsorbed to the sensor surface for 5 min. Excess protein
was washed away with buffered 2M NaCl at room temperature and the sensor
cartridge was then reinserted into the BiacoreX instrument, which was
maintained at 35.degree. C. All buffers used for Biacore measurements
were 50 mM potassium phosphate, pH 7.4 of varying NaCl concentrations.
[0188]Protein Patterning and Fluorescence Imaging. Unless otherwise noted,
phosphate buffered saline (PBS) (0.01 M phosphate and 150 mM NaCl was
adjusted to pH 7.4) was used as the low salt buffer. The gold substrate
presenting patterned SAMs was immersed into 2 ml of a 1 .mu.M solution of
Alexa488 labeled thioredoxin-ELP in PBS at 4.degree. C. Recrystallized
NaCl was then added and dissolved in the solution to raise the salt
concentration by 1.25 M, and the solution was warmed to room temperature.
Under these solution conditions, the inverse transition occurs because
T.sub.t (22.degree. C.)<T.sub.solution(.about.25.degree. C.). After
incubation for 10 min, the substrate was rinsed in PBS at room
temperature, 1.5 M NaCl and imaged in the same buffer on a BioRad MRC
1000 confocal microscope with a 10.times. or 20.times. objective. The
confocal microscope was set at 10% power level and 1500 V detector gain.
After imaging, the substrate was incubated in PBS for 5 min and
extensively rinsed with PBS. The substrate was imaged in PBS under the
same operating conditions of the confocal microscope to examine the
reversibility of thioredoxin-ELP binding onto the patterned SAM on gold.
[0189]The antibody binding to the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein was
carried out as follows: first, unlabeled thioredoxin-ELP was adsorbed to
the patterned SAM under solution conditions where T<T.sub.t, as
described previously. After rinsing the sample in PBS, 1.25 M NaCl, the
sample was incubated with 0.5 .mu.M FITC labeled anti-thioredoxin in PBS,
1.5 M NaCl for 30 min at room temperature. The substrate was imaged under
a confocal microscope at 30% power level and 1500 V detector gain. After
imaging, the substrate was incubated with PBS for 5 min and rinsed with
PBS. The substrate was imaged again under the same operating conditions
of the confocal microscope to examine the reversibility of the antibody
pattern.
B. Results
[0190]Solution Characterization of Thioredoxin-ELP Fusion Protein. The
inverse transition was spectrophotometrically characterized by monitoring
solution turbidity as a function of temperature, due to aggregation of
the ELP as it undergoes its inverse transition. The inverse transition of
the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein is shown in FIG. 13. As the
temperature was raised, the turbidity of the solution,
spectrophotometrically monitored by the optical density at 350 nm,
remained constant up to a critical temperature. Further increase in
temperature over a .about.5.degree. C. range resulted in an increase in
turbidity to a maximum value. The change in turbidity with increasing
temperature indicates the onset of the inverse phase transition due to
the formation of aggregates of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein. The
inverse transition temperature (T.sub.t), defined as the temperature at
the onset of the spectrop
hotometrically observed transition (5% of the
maximum observed turbidity), is a convenient parameter to characterize
the inverse transition. A thioredoxin control exhibited no change in
absorbance with increasing temperature, indicating that the thermally
induced aggregation observed for the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein was
due to the inverse transition of the ELP. The inverse phase transition is
also completely reversible: the aggregates were resolubilized completely
upon lowering the temperature below the T.sub.t and little hysterisis was
observed in a thermal cycle (the up and down cycles are marked by
arrows), as shown in FIG. 13.
[0191]The T.sub.t for a given ELP decreases with increasing ionic
strength. By varying the ionic strength, the T.sub.t can therefore be
modulated over a wide range (FIG. 13), which provides a convenient method
to optimize the T.sub.t of a given ELP for a specific application (FIG.
13). Manipulating the solution temperature and ionic strength also
provides experimental flexibility in inducing the inverse transition for
a specific ELP. For example, in 150 mM NaCl, the T.sub.t is 43.degree. C.
The T.sub.t is greater than that of a solution, maintained at 4.degree.
C., and the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein is therefore soluble. Upon
increasing the NaCl concentration by 1.25 M and warming to room
temperature, the T.sub.t decreases to .about.22.degree. C., which is the
visible onset of the phase transition.
[0192]We sought to maximize pattern contrast--maximal, adsorption onto
hydrophobic SAM with concomitant minimal adsorption on to the hydrophilic
background SAM--and reversibilty of the patterns by ensuring that
adsorption onto the patterned surface template occurred due to the phase
transition rather than non-specific adsorption prior to the phase
transition. We specified the following experimental parameters to achieve
this objective: protein concentration, initial incubation time and
temperature of the ELP fusion protein before induction of the ELP inverse
transition, and the environmental trigger to drive the ELP phase
transition. Because, protein adsorption onto surfaces is time,
temperature and concentration dependent, we chose a dilute, 1 .mu.M
solution of the fusion protein to minimize nonspecific adsorption on the
surface. Similarly, we exposed the patterned SAM to the thioredoxin-ELP
fusion protein briefly (5 min) at 4.degree. C., conditions chosen to
minimize adsorption prior to the phase transition. Finally, we sought to
drive the phase transition to the visible onset of turbidity to maximize
interactions of the ELP with the surface rather than solution
aggregation, as it underwent its hydrophilic-hydrophobic transition. This
is because when the intramolecular transition is initiated, the polymer
chains hydrophobically collapse, releasing waters of hydration to the
bulk. This event is subsequently followed by intermolecular aggregation
of the collapsed polymer chains, which is observed as an increase in
solution turbidity. Because intermolecular aggregation is a secondary
event, presumably with slower kinetics (which are dependent on polymer
concentration) than the intramolecular transition itself, and because the
solution is heated at typically 1.degree. C. min.sup.-1, the visible
onset of turbidity at a NaCl concentration of 1.25 M indicates the
occurrence of the phase transition.
[0193]Based on these considerations, we chose to induce the phase
transition by adding 1.25 M NaCl to a 1 .mu.M solution of thioredoxin-ELP
in PBS at 4.degree. C. and warmed the solution to room temperature up to
the visible onset of turbidity to pattern the thiroedoxin-ELP fusion
protein onto the patterned SAMs. Under these conditions, the visible
onset of turbidity occurs at .about.22.degree. C., slightly below room
temperature. We also wished to minimize the salt required to induce the
phase transition because of the effect of higher salt concentration on
the interaction of thioredoxin with anti-thioredoxin, as discussed below.
Ellipsometry.
[0194]Ex Situ Measurements. A gold substrate was microcontact printed
(.mu.CP) with hexadecanethiol (HDT) using a flat polydimethylsiloxane
(PDMS) stamp inked with 1 mM ethanol solution of the hydrophobic thiol. A
part of the gold surface was brought in contact with the inked PDMS stamp
so that HDT was transferred to only to half the surface, and formed a SAM
in the region of contact. Next, the entire substrate was briefly
incubated in a solution of MUOH which filled in the regions of the
surface, which had not been in contact with the stamp, with the
hydrophilic SAM. We measured the water contact angle and thickness of the
surface by ellipsometry. The SAM formed from HDT by .mu.CP was
hydrophobic, with a water contact angle of 92, and its thickness measured
by ellipsometry was 1.8 nm (Table I). This surface is less hydrophobic
than a control SAM of HDT created by self-assembly from a 1 mM solution
of HDT in ethanol, which exhibited a sessile water contact angle of 105.
These results suggest that the HDT SAM prepared by .mu.CP is probably
less ordered than the HDT SAM prepared by solution self assembly.
Alternatively, the SAM prepared by .mu.CP using a flat stamp is less
hydrophobic because it is subsequently incubated in a solution of MUD in
ethanol, while the control, HDT SAM prepared by solution self assembly is
not, which results in replacement of some fraction of HDT with MUOH,
thereby lowering the water contact angle.
TABLE-US-00001
TABLE I
Thickness and contact angle measurements on
hydrophobic and hydrophilic SAMs on gold.
After ELP
Before ELP adsorption desorption
Contact angle Thickness
Sample Thickness (nm) (.THETA..sub.a (H.sub.2O)) (nm)
Flat Stamp (HDT 1.8 .+-. 0.1 92 .+-. 2.degree. 3.3 .+-. 0.2
region)
Flat Stamp (MUD 1.4 .+-. 0.1 12 .+-. 2.degree. 1.9 .+-. 0.2
region)
Solution (HDT) 1.7 .+-. 0.1 105 .+-. 1.degree. 3.2 .+-. 0.2
Solution (MUD) 1.4 .+-. 0.1 4 .+-. 2.degree. 1.8 .+-. 0.2
[0195]The thickness of the unstamped region of the surface, which was
briefly incubated in MUOH, is 1.4 nm, and is similar to that of a control
SAM of MUOH, prepared from solution. The water contact angle of 12 showed
that the surface is hydrophilic, but is somewhat lower than the water
contact angle of 4 of the control SAM prepared by solution self-assembly
of MUD. The higher contact angle, we believe, is caused by the MUOH
possible exposure of the methylene groups due to disorder in the SAM,
because the brief incubation time does not allow the self assembly to
proceed to equilibrium.
[0196]SPR Analysis of ELP Adsorption and Antibody Binding. The BiacoreX
SPR instrument divides the sensor surface into two channels, which can be
separately used to immobilize biomolecules. This allows one channel to be
used as a reference, and all signals presented here are difference
signals between channel 1 (measurement) and channel 2 (reference). As
shown in FIG. 14, for the HDT SAM a signal difference between channel 1
and channel 2 of about 530 Response Units (RU) was observed [A], possibly
due to small variations in substrate preparation. At time [1] the HDT
SAM, to which the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein was adsorbed above the
T.sub.t outside the instrument was inserted [B] and a slight increase in
signal difference of .about.725 RU was observed, which was caused by the
insertion process. The reference channel 2 was then rinsed with pure
water for 5 minutes [2], which removed most of the adsorbed
thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein from the sensor surface in this channel.
The signal difference [C] of about 3300 RU corresponds to the amount of
adsorbed thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein in channel 1.
[0197]At high salt concentration, 2 M NaCl in the running buffer, the
signal was stable, but antibody binding was inefficient. Therefore the
salt concentration in the running buffer was reduced to 1 M NaCl [3],
which led to a slow desorption [D] of about 20% of the protein in about
1000 sec. The stable desorption rate was about 0.4 RU/sec. Next, channel
1 was selectively incubated with 50 .mu.l anti-thioredoxin (1:10
dilution) in running buffer [4]. The signal increased by about 1600 RU
[E] indicating significant antibody binding. Upon completion of binding,
only the time-dependent desorption at a rate of 0.4 RU/sec was observed.
[0198]The sensor temperature can be changed in the BiacoreX, and although
the temperature change is not linear with time, the temperature is
measured at the sensor surface, and can be monitored as a function of
time. Upon lowering the temperature [5] from 35.degree. C. to 18.degree.
C. (T.sub.solution<T.sub.t) the signal [F] decreased to approximately
the same level (400 RU) as the HDT SAM on gold.
[0199]The SPR measurements demonstrated that a thioredoxin-ELP fusion
protein adsorbs to a hydrophobic surface and can be significantly
desorbed by a small change of environmental conditions. The observation
that after adsorption of the fusion protein, thioredoxin binds to an
anti-thioredoxin mAb, suggests that the thioredoxin is exposed to the
bulk and accessible to binding by anti-thioredoxin. The immobilized
complex is stable at the surface, because in a separate experiment after
mAb binding, the SPR signal was stable in a buffer containing 2 M NaCl,
to within 0.08 RU/sec over several hours, though the affinity for initial
antibody binding is reduced at these salt concentrations (data not
shown). Together, these independent experiments show that the noncovalent
complex of fusion protein and antibody can be immobilized on the surface
with high stability. Finally, the complex can be desorbed to a
significant extent from the surface by lowering the temperature below the
phase transition temperature. These results show that binding and
desorption of the ELP-antibody complex is significantly reversible, but
do not allow us to claim that complete and absolute reversibilty in
desorption because the SPR measurements are relative to a reference
channel that may not show complete desorption of the fusion protein upon
rinsing in water.
[0200]Dynamic Patterning of Thioredoxin-ELP Fusion Proteins. We fabricated
a pattern of alternating 40 .mu.m wide lines of HDT against a background
of a MUOH SAM on gold by .mu.CP. The patterned SAM was then incubated in
Alexa488-labeled thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein (1 .mu.M) in low ionic
strength buffer for 5 min. at 4.degree. C. (T<T.sub.t). Recrystallized
NaCl was added to a final concentration of 1.25 M and the SAM was
incubated for a further 5 min at room temperature. The SAM was then
removed from the solution, washed in the high ionic strength buffer not
containing any protein (PBS, 1.5 M NaCl, pH 7.4) and then imaged under a
fluorescence microscope. The fluorescence image shown in FIG. 15 shows
significant contrast between the alternating hydrophobic and hydrophilic
stripes, indicating the preferential adsorption of the thioredoxin-ELP
fusion protein to the patterned hydrophobic SAM. This result indicates
that as the ELP becomes more hydrophobic upon undergoing its inverse
transition isothermally due to the addition of NaCl, the fusion protein
is preferentially driven to, and adsorbs to the patterned hydrophobic
regions on the surface, mediated by hydrophobic interactions between the
hydrophobic ELP and the methyl-terminated SAM. A line profile of the
fluorescence intensity in FIG. 15B shows that high pattern contrast can
be obtained by TRAP. The SAM was then incubated in a low ionic strength
buffer (PBS) at 4.degree. C., conditions that induce reversal of the ELP
phase transition. Upon washing the surface with a low salt buffer
(T<T.sub.t), the fluorescence contrast in the sample vanished (FIG.
15B, line profile 2), indicating reversibility of protein patterning
because of resolvation of the ELP, and consequently decreased hydrophobic
interaction between the ELP and the HDT SAM.
[0201]The SPR results showed that that the preferential binding of the ELP
to the hydrophobic SAM above the T.sub.t oriented thioredoxin such that
is accessible for binding from solution. A HDT/MUOH SAM was patterned as
before, and then incubated in 1 .mu.M thioredoxin-ELP under low ionic
strength at 4.degree. C. so that T<T.sub.t. Next, the ionic strength
of NaCl was increased by 1.25 M, and the solution warmed to room
temperature to induce the phase transition and thereby pattern the fusion
protein onto the surface by hydrophobic interactions. The SAM was then
removed and washed in a high ionic strength to remove loosely adsorbed
protein. The SAM was incubated in FITC-labeled monoclonal
anti-thioredoxin antibody (0.1 .mu.M) for 15 min. The SAM was then washed
in high ionic strength buffer and imaged by fluorescence microscopy (FIG.
16A). The fluorescence image, especially the line profile in FIG. 5B
clearly shows the preferential binding of the anti-thioredoxin to the
thioredoxin-ELP adsorbed on the HDT SAM. In contrast, little antibody
binding is observed on the regions that were patterned with MUD. Because
the antibody is sensitive to submonolayer coverage of thioredoxin, the
observed contrast confirms the successful patterning of the
thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein on the patterned SAMs. Furthermore, these
results also demonstrate that that the patterned thioredoxin is
accessible to its ligand, a thioredoxin antibody from solution.
[0202]After imaging the bound complex on the surface by fluorescence
microscopy, the sample was removed form the high salt buffer, and
thoroughly washed in PBS at 4.degree. C., solution conditions that
reverse the transition. After washing, the sample was imaged, and the
line profile of fluorescence intensity clearly shows that most of the
bound complex desorbed from the surface due to the reversibility of the
inverse transition. Upon reducing the temperature and ionic strength, the
ELP resolvates and becomes hydrophilic. Solvation of the ELP diminishes
the hydrophobic interaction between the ELP and the hydrophobic surface,
which, we postulate drives desorption of the bound complex from the
surface.
[0203]In Situ Ellipsometry. Although ex situ ellipsometry in air is
experimentally simpler and therefore more convenient, it does not enable
the final thickness of the adlayer to be measured because drying the
films leads to a large, extraneous contribution to the film thickness due
to crystallization of salt. We therefore carried out in situ measurements
of adsorption and desorption using in situ ellipsometry. We examined the
effect of increasing the salt concentration to isothermally induce the
ELP phase transition at room temperature by in situ ellipsometry of
unlabeled thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein on monolayers of a HDT
(hydrophobic) and MUOH (hydrophilic) SAM on gold.
[0204]In separate experiments, the SAMs were mounted on the ellipsometer
in a cuvet containing PBS, 150 mM NaCl, pH 7.4, and concentrated 4 M NaCl
was added in step wise increments to raise the NaCl concentration (data
not shown). The in situ ellipsometry revealed that the final steady sate
thickness of the protein was .about.120 .ANG. on the HDT SAM and
.about.100 .ANG. on the MUOH SAM at 1.8 M NaCl, conditions under which
T.sub.solution is well above the T.sub.t of the ELP. The extent of
adsorption on the MUOH SAM is greater than that suggested by the
patterning experiments conducted using fluorescence measurements. There
are a number of experimental differences between the two experiments,
such as initial adsorption temperature and time (4.degree. C., 5 min for
patterning, versus room temperature for in situ ellipsometry), and a
higher final salt concentration for the in situ ellipsometry
measurements; putuative causes of the different results obtained by in
situ ellipsometry and fluorescence microscopy are summarized in the
Discussion section of this paper.
[0205]Decreasing the salt concentration, by replacing the buffer with
lower salt concentration, resulted in partial desorption of the fusion
protein. The samples were then removed from the cuvet and washed
extensively in water. The samples were dried, and the thickness were
measured again in air, and showed a further decrease in the thickness of
the both adlayers. These results show partial, 80% reversibility of
adsorption of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion on both SAMs after extensive
rinsing in water, and are qualitatively consistent with the fluorescence
measurements.
C. Discussion
[0206]Because protein adsorption mediated by hydrophobic interactions on
patterned hydrophobic SAMs (against a protein resistant background) is
perhaps the most generic protein patterning method, we have focused on
modulating the hydrophobic interaction between a protein and a
hydrophobic surface to allow reversible binding of proteins to surfaces.
We hypothesized that because hydrophobic interactions are entropically
driven by the desolvation of a hydrophobic interface, triggered salvation
and desolvation of the interface would enable control of the hydrophobic
protein-surface interaction. In principle, this can be achieved by two
complementary methods: (1) creating a surface whose surface energy can be
switched by an external, environmental trigger, and (2) a protein whose
solvation can be externally modulated. We have chosen to initially
demonstrate this principle using the latter route, namely by controlling
the interaction between an elastin fusion protein, where the elastin tail
can be reversibly switched between two states--a hydrophilic solvated
state below its inverse transition temperature, and a hydrophobic,
desolvated state above its inverse transition temperature.
[0207]We therefore sought to create dynamic protein patterns by modulating
the adsorption of proteins, by environmental, solution control of the
hydrophobic interaction between a protein and surface. We achieved
reversible, triggered solvation-desolvation of a model protein by
synthesizing fusion proteins which incorporated a C-terminal polypeptide
tag which exhibits thermally (or ionically) reversible solvation in
response to alterations in the environmental conditions. The tag is an
elastin-like polypeptide which undergoes a thermally reversible inverse
phase transition in response to alterations in temperature or ionic
strength.
[0208]We examined the interaction between the thioredoxin-ELP fusion
protein and a patterned SAM containing a hydrophilic and hydrophobic
region at the micrometer scale in response to the inverse transition. The
preferential and reversible adsorption of ELP fusion proteins on
hydrophobic substrates enables reversible protein patterning by
thermodynamically directing an ELP fusion protein above its T.sub.t
selectively onto micropatterned hydrophobic regions against a hydrophilic
background. We call this method thermodynamically addressable reversible
patterning (TRAP), and it is potentially applicable to any molecule that
contains a moiety that is capable of undergoing a reversible
hydrophobic-hydrophilic transition. Patterning by TRAP using the inverse
transition takes advantage of a "thermodynamic address": a surface
template which exhibits patterned domains with different surface
energies, which can be easily achieved by microwriting and .mu.CP of
thiols on gold as well as by phase segregation of block copolymers and
polymer blends. The selective adsorption of ELP fusion proteins above
their T.sub.t on patterned hydrophobic regions against a hydrophilic
background, is then exploited to thermodynamically direct the fusion
protein to patterned hydrophobic domains.
[0209]We have further shown that the thioredoxin-ELP patterns created on
the patterned SAMs on gold are oriented such that some fraction of the
thioredoxin is able to bind an anti-thioredoxin monoclonal antibody from
solution, and that binding selectively occurs on the hydrophobic regions
that are patterned with the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein. Because
selective binding of the antibody is observed on the hydrophobic regions,
this suggests that the concentration of adsorbed thioredoxin-ELP fusion
is minimal on the hydrophilic, OH-terminated regions. Finally, reversing
the phase transition, by lowering the salt concentration resulted in
essentially complete desorption of the antibody-thioredoxin complex from
the surface. This is an important observation, because it shows that the
selective binding of the antibody to the hydrophobic surface is not
caused by direct hydrophobic interactions between the antibody and
surface, but is instead due to specific molecular recognition between the
antibody and thioredoxin. Finally, desorption of the bound
antibody-fusion protein complex clearly suggests that desorption is
caused by reversibility of the ELP phase transition.
[0210]The initial results reported here on dynamic protein patterning by
TRAP are promising, but there are a number of significant differences
between the results obtained by fluorescence microscopy and in situ
ellipsometry that require further clarification. In situ ellipsometry
showed significant binding of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein onto the
hydrophilic MUOH SAM in its desolvated, hydrophobic state. There are a
number of reasons that could account for this discrepancy. First, because
ellipsometry measures the thickness change of all molecules adsorbed at
the surface, a small concentration of a surface-active contaminant that
binds preferentially to the surface, and is detected in ellipsometry but
not by fluorescence microscopy (presumably because it was not labeled
with Alexa due to a lack of accessible amine groups) could account for
the differences observed by the two techniques. We believe this
possibility to be unlikely, because the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein
was exhaustively purified prior to use.
[0211]An alternative reason for the discrepancy between in situ
ellipsometry and fluorescence microscopy may lie in subtle, but important
differences in experimental protocols such as the initial temperature and
incubation time, differences in the environmental trigger used to induce
the phase transition in the two experiments, and well as in the rinsing
procedure after adsorption of the thioredoxin-ELP fusion protein above
its transition temperature. It is possible that the thiroedoxin-ELP
fusion protein is weakly adsorbed to the hydrophilic surface, and is
removed in the patterning experiments, but is retained in the in situ
ellipsometry dies to differences in the extent and vigor of rinsing in
the two separate experiments. The effect of the conjugation of the
fluorophore on surface adsorption, as well as distance dependent
quenching effects in fluorescence measurements on gold also cannot be
discounted. Studies are in progress to elucidate the origin of these
differences, as well as to optimize this patterning methodology by
systematic investigation of the effect of surface chemistry (especially
the use of oligoethylene glycol SAMs to suppress ELP adsorption onto the
background) and experimental conditions on patterning by TRAP.
[0212]TRAP is an attractive methodology to dynamically pattern proteins on
the micrometer scale on patterned hydrophobic templates because it is a
generic method that is applicable to most soluble proteins. First, this
is because the introduction of environmentally triggered properties in a
target protein simply involves gene-level N or --C-terminal fusion of the
peptide codons into a cloned or synthetic gene, which is easily achieved
by standard molecular biology manipulations. Second, fusion proteins
containing this polypeptide tag are rendered environmentally responsive,
and this appears to be a general phenomenon. Finally, the ELP tag can be
chemically conjugated to molecules that are not genetically encodable,
thereby creating an environmentally-responsive bioconjugate that can be
reversibly adsorbed and desorbed by small changes in solution conditions.
[0213]Because proteins are patterned reversibly by TRAP, unlike current
methods for protein patterning, many applications can be envisioned for
dynamic, smart proteins that have tunable surface properties that can be
created by TRAP. Temporal control of protein patterns is desirable for a
number of applications. TRAP has immediate application in patterning
biomaterials with proteins or other biomolecular ligands to modulate
cellular interactions. For example, dynamic protein patterns, where one
or more proteins are patterned reversibly, would introduce a greater
level of sophistication in the design of biomaterial surfaces that than
is currently possible. For example, multiple extracellular matrix (ECM)
proteins (or peptide ligands derived from ECM proteins) with different
desorption triggers could be patterned simultaneously, but desorbed at
different times, thereby providing temporal control of protein density on
a spatially-patterned surface, which could potentially mimic the dynamic
nature of the extracellular matrix.
[0214]Similarly, dynamic protein patterning is also likely to be useful in
the regeneration of multi analyte biosensors and in BioMEMS to control
surface properties. Specifically, the ability to bind and desorb protein
by an external signal is useful in the regeneration of biosensors that
are integrated into microfabricated devices containing microfluidics.
This would enable delivery of an analyte binding protein--the sensing
molecule--to a chip surface under conditions that induce the inverse
transition of the ELP tag and thereby promotes hydrophobic interaction
between the protein and sensor surface via the ELP tag. After analyte
binding and detection, in response to an environmental trigger--a modest
change in solution conditions such as decrease in temperature or ionic
strength--the ELP solvates, which enables the bound complex to be
desorbed from the surface, thereby regenerating the surface back to
initial conditions. Incorporation of a microfluidic system into the
microfabricated biosensor would enable analyte binding protein to be
delivered to the surface and bound by inducing the inverse transition for
a subsequent round of analyte detection. These concepts can be further
extended to reversibly pattern an array of different proteins onto
preformed, patterned SAM templates to create proteomic arrays that are
capable of releasing a bound complex to solution for downstream analysis.
[0215]The foregoing is illustrative of the present invention, and is not
to be construed as limiting thereof. The invention is defined by the
following claims, with equivalents of the claims to be included therein.
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