posted on 2020-07-14, 14:34authored byWilliam
E. Evenson, Wan-Zhen Sophie Lin, Kenmond Pang, Alexander T. Czaja, Farzad Jalali-Yazdi, Terry T. Takahashi, Noah Malmstadt, Richard W. Roberts
Modern
genomic sequencing efforts are identifying potential diagnostic
and therapeutic targets more rapidly than existing methods can generate
the peptide- and protein-based ligands required to study them. To
address this problem, we have developed a microfluidic enrichment
device (MFED) enabling kinetic off-rate selection without the use
of exogenous competitor. We tuned the conditions of the device (bed
volume, flow rate, immobilized target) such that modest, readily achievable
changes in flow rates favor formation or dissociation of target–ligand
complexes based on affinity. Simple kinetic equations can be used
to describe the behavior of ligand binding in the MFED and the kinetic
rate constants observed agree with independent measurements. We demonstrate
the utility of the MFED by showing a 4-fold improvement in enrichment
compared to standard selection. The MFED described here provides a
route to simultaneously bias pools toward high-affinity ligands while
reducing the demand for target-protein to less than a nanomole per
selection.