Molecular characterization of mucus binding

ORAL

Abstract

Mucus coats all wet epithelial surfaces of the body. Binding of small molecules to mucus has an important role in human health, as it may affect the diffusivity and activity of drugs and toxins that act in a mucosal environment. Despite the importance of mucus-small molecule binding, there is a lack of data revealing the precise physicochemical features of small molecules that lead to mucus binding. We developed a novel equilibrium dialysis assay to measure the binding of small molecules to mucin and other mucus components at unprecedented throughput, and combined this assay with a small molecule microarray to identify a novel mucin binding motif. Furthermore, we showed that for molecules with this motif, binding to mucins and the mucus-associated biopolymers DNA and alginate is modulated by differences in hydrophobicity and charge. Finally, we showed that molecules without the motif exhibited different trends from molecules with the motif, suggesting a complex dependence of mucin binding on molecular physicochemical properties.

*NIH R01-EB017755, NSF Career PHY-1454673, NSF MRSEC DMR-14-19807. TS & JW: NSF GRFP No. 1122374. JW: NIH Pre-Doctoral Training Grant T32GM87232, PepsiCo Agmt 4101535548, Novartis Agmt dtd 3/1/2018. TS: Siebel Scholarship, MIT Collamore-Rogers Fellowship.

Presenters

  • Jacob Witten

    • Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Authors

  • Jacob Witten

    • Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Tahoura Samad

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Katharina Ribbeck

    • Massachusetts Institute of Technology
    • Biological Engineering, Massachusetts Institute of Technology