Abstract

Ligand-receptor binding is of utmost importance in several biologically related disciplines. Ligand binding assays (LBA) use the high specificity and high affinity of ligands to detect, target or measure a specific receptors. One particular example of ligand binding assays are Antibody conjugated Nanoparticles (AcNPs), edge-cutting technologies that are present in several novel biomedical approaches for imaging, detection and treatment of diseases. However, the nano-confinement in AcNPs and LBA nanostructures introduces extra complexity in the analysis of ligand-receptor equilibriums. Because antibodies are large voluminous ligands, the effective affinity in AcNPs is often determined by antibody orientation and surface coverage. Moreover, antibodies have two binding sites introducing an extra ligand-receptor binding equilibrium. As consequence of all this, experimental or theoretical studies providing a guidelines for the prediction of the binding behavior in AcNPs are scarce. In this work, we present a set of theoretical calculations to shed light into the complex binding behavior of AcNPs and its implications in biomedical applications. To investigate the ligand-receptor binding on AcNPs, we have used a molecular theory that predicts the probability of different molecular conformations of the system depending on the local environment. We have considered two different pathways for designing these devices: covalently conjugated antibodies and streptavidin-biotin conjugated antibodies. We also explore the effects of surface coverage, bulk concentrations, nanoparticle size and antibody-antigen affinity. Overall, this work offers a series of theoretical predictions that can be used as a guide in the design of antibody conjugated nanoparticles for different applications.

Highlights

  • The binding between a ligand and its receptor is the main area of research in several biological related disciplines

  • We have evaluated two different designs: a) Antibody conjugated Nanoparticles (AcNPs) with antibodies covalently grafted to the surface, and b) AcNPs with antibodies conjugated through streptavidin-biotin binding

  • In this work we have presented a set of results to shed light into the behavioral complexity of the ligand-receptor binding of voluminous ligands in crowded surfaces

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Summary

Introduction

The binding between a ligand and its receptor is the main area of research in several biological related disciplines. This is an indication of the complexity of ligand-receptor equilibrium at the surface of the AcNPs. At low antigen bulk concentration (Fig 2A and 2B; 20 pM antigen), only antibodies with a very high affinity (Kd = 10-11M) can capture antigen molecules.

Results
Conclusion
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