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Chloroalkane–modified sensor chips

XanTec’s HOP, HOHC, and HOD sensor chips are coated with either a bioinert 2D carboxylate (HOP) or a 3D polycarboxylate hydrogel (HOHC, HOD), each derivatized with short-chain chloroalkanes. These functional groups form stable covalent bonds with fusion proteins bearing a 33 kDa Halo tag. Reaction is rapid, highly specific, and occurs spontaneously under preconcentration conditions, ensuring uniform ligand orientation on the sensor surface.

Compared to conventional non-selective methods such as EDC/NHS activation, the Halo tag immobilization process offers substantial advantages. It is not only significantly more convenient, but also allows for a more controlled and well-defined immobilization. By avoiding random ligand orientation and ligand crosslinking, which often occur with EDC/NHS coupling, this approach results in a homogeneous ligand population, ultimately leading to improved data quality and reproducibility in kinetic and affinity assays. Consequently, experimental workflows are streamlined, requiring fewer optimization steps, while the consistency and integrity of kinetic interaction analyses are enhanced, making it easier to draw reliable conclusions about binding kinetics and affinities.

Adequate electrostatic preconcentration remains essential for successful protein immobilization. However, traditional preconcentration scouting cannot be performed because Halo-tagged fusion proteins would directly bind to the sensor chip. Therefore, preconcentration and immobilization must be evaluated simultaneously or on a separate non-derivatized sensor chip. For further details, please refer to the product manual.

Key features:

Schematic illustration of a 3D HOHC sensor chip. Blue and red dots represent chloro groups and negatively charged carboxyl groups distributed along the green polymer chains. The decaying red gradient represents the evanescent field. The magnified view shows a Halo-tagged recombinant protein (yellow, with the HaloTag highlighted in red) covalently immobilized via a chloro group.1
Product code HOP HOD200M HOHC200M
Base coating 2D, ultra-short CM-dextran
(high density)
3D, 200 nm bioinert CM-dextran
(medium density)
3D, 200 nm bioinert polycarboxylate
(medium density)
Immobilization capacity [µRIU] 2 ≈ 3,000 ≈12,000 ≈15,000
Recommended ligands Halo-tagged peptides and proteins
Recommended analytes
  • proteins
  • peptides
  • nucleic acids
  • viruses and cells
  • proteins
  • peptides
  • nucleic acids
  • small molecules
  • proteins
  • peptides
  • nucleic acids
  • small molecules
  • carbohydrates
Intended purpose
  • immobilization of Halo-tagged peptides and proteins
  • use of detergent-containing buffers recommended
  • high-density immobilization of Halo-tagged proteins
  • use of detergent-containing buffers recommended
  • high-density immobilization of Halo-tagged proteins
  • use of detergent-containing buffers recommended

1 All illustrations are schematic representations and are not drawn to scale; dimensions, densities, and spatial relationships do not reflect actual physical or chemical proportions.

2 Based on specific binding of 30 µg/mL HaloTag®-GST fusion protein (61 kDa) in 5 mM sodium acetate pH 5.0, with 1 µRIU corresponding approximately to 1 RU.