AI Article Synopsis

  • Electrochemical biosensors convert biological interactions directly into electrical signals, making them useful for analyzing proteins and DNA-protein complexes efficiently.
  • Using constant current chronopotentiometric stripping (CPS), researchers observed that specific DNA binding by the p53 core domain reduces the electrochemical signal, reflecting changes in the binding complex's structure and stability.
  • By fine-tuning experimental conditions, the method can differentiate between specific and non-specific binding interactions and can analyze very small amounts of proteins and DNA, though the detection limits are influenced by the stability of the complexes.

Article Abstract

Electrochemical biosensors have the unique ability to convert biological events directly into electrical signals suitable for parallel analysis. Here we utilize specific properties of constant current chronopotentiometric stripping (CPS) in the analysis of protein and DNA-protein complex nanolayers. Rapid potential changes at high negative current intensities (Istr) in CPS are utilized in the analysis of DNA-protein interactions at thiol-modified mercury electrodes. P53 core domain (p53CD) sequence-specific binding to DNA results in a striking decrease in the electrocatalytic signal of free p53. This decrease is related to changes in the accessibility of the electroactive amino acid residues in the p53CD-DNA complex. By adjusting Istr and temperature, weaker non-specific binding can be eliminated or distinguished from the sequence-specific binding. The method also reflects differences in the stabilities of different sequence-specific complexes, including those containing spacers between half-sites of the DNA consensus sequence. The high resolving power of this method is based on the disintegration of the p53CD-DNA complex by the electric field effects at a negatively charged surface and fine adjustment of the millisecond time intervals for which the complex is exposed to these effects. Picomole amounts of p53 proteins and DNA were used for the analysis at full electrode coverage but we show that even 10-20-fold smaller amounts can be analyzed. Our method cannot however take advantage of very low detection limits of the protein CPS detection because low I(str) intensities are deleterious to the p53CD-DNA complex stability at the electrode surface. These data highlight the utility of developing biosensors offering novel approaches for studying real-time macromolecular protein dynamics.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.aca.2014.03.029DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Electrochemical biosensors convert biological interactions directly into electrical signals, making them useful for analyzing proteins and DNA-protein complexes efficiently.
  • Using constant current chronopotentiometric stripping (CPS), researchers observed that specific DNA binding by the p53 core domain reduces the electrochemical signal, reflecting changes in the binding complex's structure and stability.
  • By fine-tuning experimental conditions, the method can differentiate between specific and non-specific binding interactions and can analyze very small amounts of proteins and DNA, though the detection limits are influenced by the stability of the complexes.
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