1. Protein microarrays and their applications
- Author
-
Teruyuki Nagamune and Bum Hwan Lee
- Subjects
medicine.diagnostic_test ,Biomedical Engineering ,RNA ,Bioengineering ,Computational biology ,Biology ,Proteomics ,Applied Microbiology and Biotechnology ,Genome ,Cell biology ,chemistry.chemical_compound ,chemistry ,Immunoassay ,medicine ,Protein microarray ,Native state ,Bradford protein assay ,DNA ,Biotechnology - Abstract
In recent years, the importance of proteomic works, such as protein expression, detection and identification, has grown in the fields of proteomic and diagnostic research. This is because complete genome sequences of humans, and other organisms, progress as cellular processing and controlling are performed by proteins as well as DNA or RNA. However, conventional protein analyses are time-consuming; therefore, high throughput protein analysis methods, which allow fast, direct and quantitative detection, are needed. These are so-called protein microarrays or protein chips, which have been developed to fulfill the need for high-throughput protein analyses. Although protein arrays are still in their infancy, technical development in immobilizing proteins in their native conformation on arrays, and the development of more sensitive detection methods, will facilitate the rapid deployment of protein arrays as high-throughput protein assay tools in proteomics and diagnostics. This review summarizes the basic technologies that are needed in the fabrication of protein arrays and their recent applications.
- Published
- 2004
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