Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1185312 Food Chemistry 2010 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Two surface plasmon resonance (SPR)-based interaction analysis methods were successfully implemented to explore the binding between plant PME and kiwi PMEI. In a first method, plant PMEs were immobilised on a chip surface via amine coupling. This experimental setup allowed studying the effect of pH and ionic strength on the PME–PMEI interaction kinetics. Strong binding was obtained at pH < 7 and at low salt concentrations, whereas both pH ⩾ 8 and [NaCl] of ca. 1.0 M effectively caused dissociation. In a second method, kiwi PMEI was immobilised on a chip surface to which streptavidin had been covalently attached. Hereto, PMEI was biotinylated by means of a NHS-biotin reagent. With this immobilisation strategy, the effect of (partial) thermal or high pressure-induced denaturation of PME on its affinity towards PMEI was investigated. A notable degree of enzyme inactivation was required before interaction characteristics were significantly altered. Any incomplete inactivation of PME resulted in binding to the PMEI surface.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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