• Methods Mol. Biol. · Jan 2010

    A peptide microarray for detecting protein kinase activity in cell lysates.

    • Xiaoming Han and Yoshiki Katayama.
    • Graduate School of System Life Sciences, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, Japan.
    • Methods Mol. Biol. 2010 Jan 1; 669: 183-94.

    AbstractProtein kinases (PKs) are widely recognized as valuable targets for disease diagnosis and drug discovery. For this reason, we have developed a sensitive peptide microarray for detecting intracellular PK activity. Peptides are immobilized on a glutaraldehyde-premodified high-amino terminal glass slide, by spotting 2 nL volumes of substrate peptide solutions with an automated microarray spotter. After the peptides are phosphorylated by cell lysates, phosphorylation is specifically recognized by a fluorescence-labeled antiphosphotyrosine antibody for tyrosine kinases, or Phos-tag biotin (a biotinylated phosphate-specific ligand based on Zn(2+) complex), which is subsequently bound with fluorescence-labeled streptavidin, for serine/threonine kinases. The fluorescence signal is then detected by an automatic microarray scanner. The peptide microarray system involves simple peptide immobilization, requires low sample volumes and provides a high density array. Importantly, it provides high sensitivity for detecting PK activities in cell lysates. Thus, the peptide microarray system is expected to be useful for a high-throughput kinase assay to investigate intracellular kinase activity and has potential applications in disease diagnosis and drug discovery.

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