Surface-enhanced
Raman spectroscopy (SERS) has exhibited great
potential in protein identification and quantification. However, the
poor spectral reproducibility, originating from random protein immobilization
on SERS substrates, still makes it challenging for SERS to probe protein
functions without any extrinsic Raman labels. Here, in our study,
spacer molecules between proteins and SERS substrates are optimized
for both biocompatible protein immobilization and Raman scattering
enhancement. We have accordingly prepared iminodiacetic acid (IDA)-functionalized
silver substrates, which are used for capturing His-tagged proteins
via nickel–imidazole coordination. The controlled immobilization
enables excellent SERS spectral reproducibility as evidenced by 6
polypeptides. Furthermore, the interactions between two model proteins,
Erv1C (C-terminal domain of flavine adenine dinucleotide-dependent
mitochondrial cytochrome c reductase Erv1) and AFP (alpha-fetoprotein),
and their ligands Cyt c (cytochrome c) and ATRA (all-trans-retinoic
acid) are examined, respectively. The results indicate that the IDA-functionalized
silver substrates enable controlled protein immobilization and allow
label-free protein function investigation by SERS. As a proof-of-concept
study, the proposed functionalized SERS-active substrates combined
with immobilized metal-affinity chromatography will be useful for
mechanism studies on protein–ligand interactions, which is
crucially important for understanding the structural basis of protein
functional versatility and will contribute to the fields of drug design
and biotechnology.