posted on 2019-04-25, 00:00authored byYakov
A. Lomakin, Alena N. Kaminskaya, Alexey V. Stepanov, Anna A. Shmidt, Alexander G. Gabibov, Alexey A. Belogurov
Specific
recognition of ligands by surface receptors of eukaryotic
cells is a fundamental process in sensing of the exogenous environment,
including cell-to-cell communication. These interactions are therefore
widely probed in both basic studies and drug development to enhance
or interrupt them. Here, we designed a high-throughput publicly available
platform for visualization and selection of eukaryotic cells according
to the specificity of surface-exposed receptors by consolidation of
phage display and flow cytometry techniques. Polypeptide ligands for
membrane receptors are incorporated into every copy of p3 protein
of M13K07 bacteriophage, which is intracellularly biotinylated to
further accept PE-Cy7-labled streptavidin. Transgenic antigen-specific
B-cells expressing membrane-tethered lymphoid B-cell receptor in a
single-chain format interacted with engineered bacteriophages exposing
the polypeptide ligand with an unprecedented selectivity of 97% and
a false-positive detection value of 2.0%. Multivalent binding of the
phage bioconjugates with the receptor provided significantly better
specificity and sensitivity allowing application of engineered bacteriophage
bioconjugates at a concentration 3 orders of magnitude lower in comparison
with synthetic biotinylated peptide. We suggest that the platform
described in this work may be applied either for routine staining
or characterization of orphan membrane receptors exposed on the surface
of living mammalian cells in their native environment.