Abstract

Nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB), regulating the expression of several genes that mediate the inflammatory responses and cell proliferation, is one of the therapeutic targets for chronic inflammatory disease and cancer. A novel molecular binding scheme for the detection of NF-κB was investigated for its affinity to Ig-κB DNA composed by dye and quencher fluorophores, and this specificity is confirmed by competing with the DNA sequence that is complementary to the Ig-κB DNA. We create a normalization equation to remove the negative effects from the various initial fluorophore concentrations and the background noise. We also found that a periodic shaking at a frequency could help to stabilize the DNA–protein binding. The calibration experiment, using purified p50 (NF-κB), shows that this molecular probe biosensor has a detection limit on the order of nanomolar. The limit of detection is determined by the binding performance of dye and quencher oligonucleotides, and only a small portion of probes are stabilized by DNA-binding protein NF-κB. The specificity experiment also shows that p50/p65 heterodimer has the highest affinity for Ig-κB DNA; p65 homodimer binds with intermediate affinity, whereas p50 shows the lowest binding affinity, and Ig-κB DNA is not sensitive to BSA (bovine albumin serum). The experiment of HeLa nuclear extract shows that TNF-α stimulated HeLa nuclear extract has higher affinity to Ig-κB DNA than non-TNF-stimulated HeLa nuclear extract (4-h serum response). Therefore, the molecular binding scheme provides a rapid, quantitative, high throughput, and automated measurement of the DNA-binding protein NF-κB at low cost, which is beneficial for automated drug screening systems.

Highlights

  • Nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) regulates the expression of several genes that mediate the inflammatory responses and cell proliferation and is one of the therapeutic targets for chronic inflammatory disease and cancer [1,2,3]

  • DNA-binding protein NF-κB at low cost, which is beneficial for automated drug screening systems

  • The experiment of DNA pair biosensor for quantization of Nuclear Factor Kappa B is designed using an 80 μL well on a corning 384-well plate (Corning Inc., Corning, NY, USA), where the small well needs better mixing during the reaction process

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Summary

Introduction

Nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB) regulates the expression of several genes that mediate the inflammatory responses and cell proliferation and is one of the therapeutic targets for chronic inflammatory disease and cancer [1,2,3]. The Rel/NF-κB family of inducible transcription factors mediates cellular response to a broad array of stimuli by regulating the expression of hundreds of genes (enhancer sequences) with distinct functions, including immune, inflammatory response, programmable cell death, growth, proliferation, and development. These DNA sequences are collectively known as κB DNA sequences. The NF-κB family can be divided into two subgroups based on the presence or absence of an Biosensors 2018, 8, 126; doi:10.3390/bios8040126 www.mdpi.com/journal/biosensors

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