1. School of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Southern Medical University, Guangzhou, 510515, China;
2. Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Chinese Medicine Pharmaceutics, Guangzhou, 510515,China;
3. Guangdong Provincial Engineering Laboratory of Chinese Medicine Preparation Technology,Guangzhou, 510515, China;
4. Department of Chemistry, University of California, Irvine, CA, 92697, USA
Funds:
This work was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province, China (Grant No.: 2017A030313775), the Science and Technology Planning Project of Guangdong Province, China (Grant No.: 2016A010103016), and the Science and Technology Planning Project of Guangzhou City of Guangdong Province, China (Grant No.: 201607010148).
Synthetic polymer hydrogel nanoparticles (NPs) were developed to function as abiotic affinity reagents for fibrinogen. These NPs were made using both temperature-sensitive N-isopropyl acrylamide (NIPAm) and l-amino acid monomers. Five kinds of l-amino acids were acryloylated to obtain functional monomers: l-phenylalanine (Phe) and l-leucine (Leu) with hydrophobic side chains, l-glutamic acid (Glu) with negative charges, and l-lysine (Lys) and l-arginine (Arg) with positive charges. After incubating the NPs with fibrinogen, γ-globulin, and human serum albumin (HSA) respectively, the NPs that incorporated N-acryloyl-Arg monomers (AArg@NPs) showed the strongest and most specific binding affinity to fibrinogen, when compared with γ-globulin and HSA. Additionally, the fibrinogen-AArg binding model had the best docking scores, and this may be due to the interaction of positively charged AArg@NPs and the negatively charged fibrinogen D domain and the hydrophobic interaction between them. The specific adsorption of AArg@NPs to fibrinogen was also confirmed by the immunoprecipitation assay, as the AArg@NPs selectively trapped the fibrinogen from a human plasma protein mixture. AArg@NPs had a strong selectivity for, and specificity to, fibrinogen and may be developed as a potential human fibrinogen-specific affinity reagent.