| Frontiers
in Drug Design and Discovery
ISBN: 90-77527-03-6
OPEN ACCESS ARTICLES
Contents

Protein and Antibody Microarrays: Clues Towards
Biomarker Discovery, 2006, 2, 23-33
K. Usui-Aoki, M. Kyo, M. Kawai, M. Murakami,
K. Imai, K. Shimada and H. Koga
[Abstract] [Full
Text Article]
Abstracts
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Protein and Antibody Microarrays: Clues Towards Biomarker
Discovery
K. Usui-Aoki, M. Kyo, M. Kawai, M. Murakami,
K. Imai, K. Shimada and H. Koga
[Full
Text Article]
The recent advancement of proteomics technologies has
provided us a variety of approaches for protein-expression
profiling. Among these approaches, protein and antibody microarrays
are promising new ones for biomarker discovery. Although at
present they have several limitations with respect to sample
preparation, sensitivity, specificity, and so on, protein
and antibody microarrays will no doubt become a standard adjunctive
method in the actual clinical scene. With this in mind, we
have been establishing a novel system for antibody microarray
in which surface plasmon resonance (SPR) technology is utilized
for the signal detection. Up to 400 real-time antibody-target
bindings could be measured simultaneously within a single
hour. Although SPR is assumed to be an expedient technology
for protein and antibody microarrays, here we describe its
advantages and disadvantaged compared to other detection technologies.
This review focuses on the technological aspects of these
two methods and a discussion of their clinical usefulness.
We further emphasize the interpretation of the protein and
antibody microarray results in combination with the results
of DNA microarray and intracellular pathways mainly constructed
from data on protein-protein interaction.
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