Surface Plasmon Resonance-based Sensors To Identify cis-Regulatory Elements
- 7 October 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 76 (22) , 6555-6559
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac049371e
Abstract
In eukaryotes, transcription is regulated by multiprotein complexes binding to specific regions of genomic DNA, called cis-regulatory elements. Comprehensive identification of these elements is an important goal of functional genomics. Hence, it is of practical interest to develop a high-throughput assay to identify cis-regulatory elements. Toward that goal, we demonstrate that a surface plasmon resonance-based assay can identify whether a specific region of DNA binds to proteins present in raw nuclear lysate. Specifically, we immobilized a 16-basepair double-stranded DNA region of the SQSTM1 promoter to the Texas Instruments Spreeta, a surface plasmon resonance sensor. As a control, in a separate experiment, we immobilized a similar piece of DNA that differed by only a single base pair. We observed a significant difference in surface plasmon resonance signal when these two probes were exposed to raw nuclear lysate from NIH/3T3 cells. Using a luciferase-reporter vector transfected into live NIH/3T3 cells, we measured a significant difference in transcriptional activity between the two pieces of DNA. We conclude that a surface plasmon resonance-based sensor is capable of identifying physiologically significant cis-regulatory elements.Keywords
This publication has 15 references indexed in Scilit:
- A conserved developmental program for sensory organ formation in Drosophila melanogasterNature Genetics, 2004
- Expression Profiling and Comparative Genomics Identify a Conserved Regulatory Region Controlling Midline Expression in the Zebrafish EmbryoGenome Research, 2004
- Whole-Genome Discovery of Transcription Factor Binding Sites by Network-Level ConservationGenome Research, 2003
- Functional tests of enhancer conservation between distantly related speciesDevelopment, 2003
- Fabrication of Histidine-Tagged Fusion Protein Arrays for Surface Plasmon Resonance Imaging Studies of Protein−Protein and Protein−DNA InteractionsAnalytical Chemistry, 2003
- Wavelength-tunable surface plasmon resonance microscopeReview of Scientific Instruments, 2003
- Surface plasmon resonance spectroscopy in the study of membrane‐mediated cell signallingJournal of Peptide Science, 2003
- Surface Plasmon Resonance-Based ImmunoassaysMethods, 2000
- Detection of DNA Hybridization Using the TISPR-1 Surface Plasmon Resonance BiosensorAnalytical Biochemistry, 1999
- Surface–plasmon microscopyNature, 1988