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1.
A significant challenge for all biosensor systems is to achieve high assay sensitivity and specificity while minimizing sample preparation requirements, operational complexity, and sample-to-answer time. We have achieved multiplexed, unamplified, femtomolar detection of both DNA and proteins in complex matrices (including whole blood, serum, plasma, and milk) in minutes using as few as two reagents by labeling conventional assay schemes with micrometer-scale magnetic beads, and applying fluidic force discrimination (FFD). In FFD assays, analytes captured onto a microarray surface are labeled with microbeads, and a controlled laminar flow is then used to apply microfluidic forces sufficient to preferentially remove only nonspecifically bound bead labels. The density of beads that remain bound is proportional to the analyte concentration and can be determined with either optical counting or magnetoelectronic detection of the magnetic labels. Combining FFD assays with chip-based magnetoelectronic detection enables a simple, potentially handheld, platform capable of both nucleic acid hybridization assays and immunoassays, including orthogonal detection and identification of bacterial and viral pathogens, and therefore suitable for a wide range of biosensing applications.  相似文献   

2.
Herein, we describe the direct detection of genomic DNA using fluidic force discrimination (FFD) assays. Starting with extracted bacterial DNA, samples are fragmented by restriction enzymes or sonication, then thermocycled in the presence of blocking and labeling sequences, and finally detected with microbead-based FFD assays. Both strain and species identification of extracted Bacillus DNA have been demonstrated in <30 min, without amplification (e.g., PCR). Femtomolar assays can be achieved with this rapid and simple procedure.  相似文献   

3.
Systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) was used to develop DNA ligands (aptamers) to cholera whole toxin and staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB). Affinity selection of aptamers was accomplished by conjugating the biotoxins to tosyl-activated magnetic beads. The use of magnetic beads reduces the volumes needed to perform aptamer selection, thus obviating alcohol precipitation and allowing direct PCR amplification from the bead surface. Following five rounds of SELEX, 5'-biotinylated aptamers were bound to streptavidin-coated magnetic beads and used for the detection of ruthenium trisbypyridine [Ru(bpy)3(2+)]-labeled cholera toxin and SEB by an electrochemiluminescence methodology. A comparison of control (double-stranded) aptamer binding was made with aptamers that were heat denatured at 96 degrees C (single-stranded) and allowed to cool (conform) in the presence of biotoxin-conjugated magnetic beads. Results suggest that control aptamers performed equally well when compared to heat-denatured DNA aptamers in the cholera toxin electrochemiluminescence assay and a colorimetric microplate assay employing peroxidase-labeled cholera toxin and 5'-amino terminated aptamers conjugated to N-oxysuccinimide-activated microtiter wells. Interestingly, however, in the SEB electrochemiluminescence assay, double-stranded aptamers exceeded the performance of single-stranded aptamers. The detection limits of all aptamer assays were in the low nanogram to low picogram ranges.  相似文献   

4.
Methodology has been developed which gives a specific measure of the interaction of an SH2 domain with a phosphopeptide ligand using scintillation proximity assay (SPA) technology. Recombinant SH2 domains were expressed from a T7 RNA polymerase-based vector inEscherichia colias fusions to the C-terminus of the FK506-binding protein (FKBP) and purified from freeze-thaw lysates in high yield by affinity chromatography using immobilized phosphopeptides. For binding assays the phosphopeptide ligands were synthesized with a biotin tag and the FKBP fusion proteins were noncovalently radiolabeled with commercially available [3H]dihydroFK506. Complexes of tritiated SH2 fusion protein and biotinyl-phosphopeptide were then captured on streptavidin-coated SPA beads and counted. The modular protocol is an equilibrium technique that does not employ washing steps or specialized radiochemical syntheses required in other binding assays. The utility of the assay has been demonstrated in an examination of the ligand specificity of the SH2 domains of the tyrosine kinases ZAP70, Syk, and Lck. The methodology is potentially generalizable to any receptor–ligand interaction in which one component can be expressed as a fusion partner with FKBP and the other component can be captured on a SPA bead.  相似文献   

5.
The growing importance of mass spectrometry for the identification and characterization of bacterial protein toxins is a consequence of the improved sensitivity and specificity of mass spectrometry-based techniques, especially when these techniques are combined with affinity methods. Here we describe a novel method based on the use of immunoaffinity capture and matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization-time of flight mass spectrometry for selective purification and detection of staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB). SEB is a potent bacterial protein toxin responsible for food poisoning, as well as a potential biological warfare agent. Unambiguous detection of SEB at low-nanogram levels in complex matrices is thus an important objective. In this work, an affinity molecular probe was prepared by immobilizing anti-SEB antibody on the surface of para-toluene-sulfonyl-functionalized monodisperse magnetic particles and used to selectively isolate SEB. Immobilization and affinity capture procedures were optimized to maximize the density of anti-SEB immunoglobulin G and the amount of captured SEB, respectively, on the surface of magnetic beads. SEB could be detected directly "on beads" by placing the molecular probe on the matrix-assisted laser desorption ionization target plate or, alternatively, "off beads" after its acidic elution. Application of this method to complex biological matrices was demonstrated by selective detection of SEB present in different matrices, such as cultivation media of Staphylococcus aureus strains and raw milk samples.  相似文献   

6.
Escherichia coli MutL loads DNA helicase II onto DNA   总被引:4,自引:0,他引:4  
Previous studies have shown that MutL physically interacts with UvrD (DNA helicase II) (Hall, M. C., Jordan, J. R., and Matson, S. W. (1998) EMBO J. 17, 1535-1541) and dramatically stimulates the unwinding reaction catalyzed by UvrD in the presence and absence of the other protein components of the methyl-directed mismatch repair pathway (Yamaguchi, M., Dao, V., and Modrich, P. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 9197-9201). The mechanism of this stimulation was investigated using DNA binding assays, single-turnover helicase assays, and unwinding assays involving long duplex DNA substrates. The results indicate that MutL binds DNA and loads UvrD onto the DNA substrate. The interaction between MutL and DNA and that between MutL and UvrD are both important for stimulation of UvrD-catalyzed unwinding. MutL does not clamp UvrD onto the substrate; and therefore, the processivity of unwinding is not increased in the presence of MutL. The implications of these results are discussed, and models are presented for the mechanism of MutL stimulation as well as for the role of MutL as a master coordinator in the methyl-directed mismatch repair pathway.  相似文献   

7.
The work of fabricating a piezoelectric (PZ) immunosensor for the detection of staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB) is presented in this paper. Three different immobilization methods using anti-SEB antibody onto a gold electrode of the PZ have been conducted. The electrode coated with polyethyleneimine (PEI) has shown the best result. The fabricated PZ sensor can be used for SEB determination in the range of 2.5–60 μg/ml with a correlation coefficient of 0.997. Milk samples spiked with various concentrations of SEB gave an average of 111% recovery of the toxin. The SEB assay is specific. For example the presence of staphylococcal enterotoxin A (SEA) at 40 μg/ml gave 6.44% of the signal while staphylococcal enterotoxin D (SED) appeared to give no detectable signal. After regeneration with 1.2 M NaOH, the coated crystal could be reused three times with retention of 66% of the initial signal. The crystal has also been found to be stable for 3 days when stored at 4 °C in a dry atmosphere without appreciable loss of activity.  相似文献   

8.
A multiplexing bead-based platform provides an approach for the development of assays targeting specific analytes for biomonitoring and biosensing applications. Multi-Analyte Profiling (xMAP) assays typically employ a sandwich-type format using antibodies for the capture and detection of analytes of interest, and the system permits the simultaneous quantitation of multiple targets. In this study, an aptamer/antibody assay for the detection of C-reactive protein (CRP) was developed. CRP is an acute phase marker of inflammation whose elevated basal levels are correlated with an increased risk for a number of pathologies. For this assay, an RNA aptamer that binds CRP was conjugated to beads to act as the capture agent. Biotinylated anti-CRP antibody coupled to fluorescently labeled streptavidin was used for quantification of CRP. The detection limit of the CRP assay was 0.4 mg/L in diluted serum. The assay was then used to detect spiked CRP samples in the range of 0.4 to 10 mg/L in diluted serum with acceptable recoveries (extrapolated values of 70–130%), including that of a certified reference material (129% recovery). The successful incorporation of the CRP aptamer into this platform demonstrates that the exploration of other aptamer–target systems could increase the number of analytes measurable using xMAP-type assays.  相似文献   

9.
Different assay formats based on the coupling of magnetic beads with electrochemical transduction were compared here for the detection of thrombin by using a thrombin specific aptamer. By using the thrombin-binding aptamer, a direct and an indirect competitive assay for thrombin have been developed by immobilising the aptamer or the protein, respectively. Moreover, another strategy was based on the direct measurement of the enzymatic product of thrombin captured by the immobilised aptamer. All the assays were developed by coupling the electrochemical transduction with the innovative and advantageous use of magnetic beads.

The assays based on the immobilisation of the protein were not successful since no binding was recorded between thrombin and its aptamer. With the direct competitive assay, when the aptamer was immobilised onto the magnetic beads, a detection limit of 430 nM for thrombin was achieved. A lower detection limit for the protein (175 nM) was instead obtained by detecting the product of the enzymatic reaction catalysed by thrombin. All these assays were finally compared with a sandwich assay which reached a detection limit of 0.45 nM of thrombin demonstrating the best analytical performances.

With this comparison the importance of a deep study on the different analytical approaches for thrombin detection to reach the performances of the best assay configuration has been demonstrated.  相似文献   


10.
The volume amplified magnetic nanobead detection assay [Str?mberg, M., G?ransson, J., Gunnarsson, K., Nilsson, M., Svedlindh, P., Str?mme, M., 2008. Nano Letters 8, 816-821] was investigated with respect to bead size, bead surface coverage of probe oligonucleotides, bead concentration and rolling circle amplification (RCA) time, with the objective to improve the understanding of the microscopic mechanisms influencing the assay. The most important findings for future biosensor development were the following: (i) small beads exhibit a much reduced tendency to cross-link several RCA products, thus enabling use of both complex magnetisation turn-on and turn-off detection strategies, whereas larger beads only allow for turn-off detection; (ii) small beads exhibit faster immobilisation kinetics, thus reducing the time for diagnostic test completion, and also immobilise in larger numbers than larger beads. Finally, (iii) by demonstrating qualitative dual-target detection of bacterial DNA sequences using 130 and 250nm beads, the bioassay was shown to allow for multiplexed detection.  相似文献   

11.
A quantitative hybridization assay termed "reversible target capture" is described. The technique is designed to extensively purify the target nucleic acid from crude cell lysates in about 1 h without phenol extraction. Simple, rapid methods are described that explain how each process in the assay is optimized. The procedure involves hybridizing the target nucleic acid in solution with a dA-tailed capture probe and a labeled probe. The capture probe-target-labeled probe "ternary complex" is then captured on magnetic beads containing oligo(dT). After the excess unhybridized labeled probe, cell debris, and other sample impurities are washed away, the intact ternary complex is further purified by chemical elution from the beads and recapture on fresh beads. The ternary complex is then eluted thermally and recaptured on a third set of beads or on poly(dT) filters. This triple capture method results in a detection limit of approximately 0.2 amol (100 fg) of target with 32P-labeled riboprobes. This is approximately 1000 times more sensitive than sandwich assays employing only a single capture step. The method is illustrated by detecting Listeria cells in the presence of heterologous bacteria. With three rounds of target capture, as few as six Listeria cells have been detected in the presence of 1.25 x 10(7) control cells.  相似文献   

12.
The Nitella-based in vitro motility assay developed by Sheetz and Spudich (Sheetz, M.P., and Spudich, J. A. (1983) Nature 303, 31-35) is a quantitative assay for measuring the velocity of myosin-coated beads over an organized substratum of actin. We have used this assay to analyze the effect of phosphorylation of various sites on the 20,000-Da light chain of smooth muscle and cytoplasmic myosins. Phosphorylation by myosin light chain kinase at serine 19 on the 20,000-Da light chain subunit of smooth muscle myosin from turkey gizzard, bovine trachea and aorta, and of cytoplasmic myosin from human platelets was required for bead movement. The individual phosphorylated myosin-coated beads moved at characteristic rates under the same conditions (turkey gizzard myosin, 0.2 micron/s; aorta or trachea myosin, 0.12 micron/s; and platelet myosin, 0.04 micron/s; in contrast, rabbit skeletal muscle myosin, 2 micron/s). Myosin light chain kinase can also phosphorylate threonine 18 in addition to serine 19, and this phosphorylation resulted in an increase in the actin-activated MgATPase activity (Ikebe, M., and Hartshorne, D.J. (1985) J. Biol. Chem. 260, 10027-10031). Phosphorylation at this site had no effect on the velocity of smooth muscle myosin-coated beads. Protein kinase C (Ca2+/phospholipid-dependent enzyme) can also phosphorylate two to three sites on the 20,000-Da light chain, and this phosphorylation alone did not result in the movement of myosin-coated beads. When myosin that had been previously phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase at serine 19 was also phosphorylated by protein kinase C, myosin-coated beads moved at the same velocity as beads coated with myosin phosphorylated by myosin light chain kinase alone. Tropomyosin binding to actin also had an activating effect on the actin-activated MgATPase activity through an effect on the Vmax and also resulted in an increase in the velocity of myosin-coated beads.  相似文献   

13.
We have used an in vitro assay to characterize some of the motile properties of sea urchin egg kinesin. Egg kinesin is purified via 5'-adenylyl imidodiphosphate-induced binding to taxol-assembled microtubules, extraction from the microtubules in ATP, and gel filtration chromatography (Scholey, J. M., Porter, M. E., Grissom, P. M., and McIntosh, J. R. (1985) Nature 318, 483-486). This partially purified kinesin is then adsorbed to a glass coverslip, mixed with microtubules and ATP, and viewed by video-enhanced differential interference contrast microscopy. The microtubule translocating activity of the purified egg kinesin is qualitatively similar to the analogous activity observed in crude extracts of sea urchin eggs and resembles the activity of neuronal kinesin with respect to both the maximal rate (greater than 0.5 micron/s) and the direction of movement. Axonemes glide on a kinesin-coated coverslip toward their minus ends, and kinesin-coated beads translocate toward the plus ends of centrosome microtubules. Sea urchin egg kinesin is inhibited by high concentrations of SH reagents ([N-ethylmaleimide] greater than 3-5 mM), vanadate greater than 50 microM, and [nonhydrolyzable nucleotides] greater than or equal to [MgATP]. The nucleotide requirement of sea urchin egg kinesin is fairly broad (ATP greater than GTP greater than ITP), and the rate of microtubule movement increases in a saturable fashion with the [ATP]. We conclude that the motile activity of egg kinesin is indistinguishable from that of neuronal kinesin. We propose that egg kinesin may be associated with microtubule-based motility in vivo.  相似文献   

14.
To determine if singlet oxygen (O2(1 delta g)) is produced by neutrophils (PMNs) during the process of phagocytosis, glass beads were coated with a specific chemical trap for O2(1 delta g), 9,10-diphenylanthracene (DPA). Singlet oxygen, but not other reactive oxygen species, reacts rapidly with DPA at a rate of kr = 1.3 x 10(6) M-1 s-1 to form a stable product, DPA-endoperoxide (Corey, E. J., and Taylor, W. C. (1964) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 86, 3881-3882; Wasserman, H. H., Scheffer, J. R., and Cooper, J. L. (1972) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 94, 4991-4996; Turro, N. J., Chow, M.-F., and Rigaudy, J. (1981) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 103, 7218-7224). The production of DPA-endoperoxide was determined by ultraviolet spectroscopy as a decrease in DPA absorbance at 355 nm. The absorbance of DPA was normalized to the absorbance of perylene, which was included in the coating on the beads as a nonreactive, internal standard. In the present study, DPA- and perylene-coated beads were initially allowed to adhere to fibronectin-coated coverslips. PMNs were then added to the bead-coated coverslips and allowed to adhere and phagocytose the beads for 1 h at 37 degrees C. In some experiments, 4B-phorbol-12-myristate-13-acetate (PMA) (1 ng/2.5 x 10(7) cells/ml), a known activator of the PMN NADPH-oxidase, was added as a co-stimulant. The amount of O2(1 delta g) produced by phagocytically stimulated PMNs was calculated to be 11.3 +/- 4.9 nmol of O2(1 delta g)/1.25 x 10(6) cells. Low dose PMA co-stimulation increased the production of O2(1 delta g) to 14.1 +/- 4.1 nmol/1.25 x 10(6) cells. Averaged together these amounts represent approximately 19 +/- 5.0% of the total oxygen consumed by PMNs in response to DPA- and perylene-coated beads. The specificity of the DPA reaction with O2(1 delta g) was confirmed by warming to 120 degrees C, which releases O2(1 delta g) from the DPA-endoperoxide, regenerating the parent DPA compound (Wasserman et al., 1972; Turro et al., 1981) and the absorbance at 355 nm. In addition, beta-carotene, an avid quencher of O2(1 delta g), was included in the coating of some bead preparations; assays in which these beads were used showed no change in the absorbance at 355 nm. Singlet oxygen production by myeloperoxidase was also measured using the coated bead assay and the results suggest that this is a major pathway by which singlet oxygen is generated in phagocytically stimulated PMNs.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
The antimicrobial activity of manuka honey has been well documented (Molan, 1992a,b,c, 1997) [Molan, P.C., 1992. The antibacterial activity of honey. 1: the nature of the antibacterial activity. Bee World 73 (1) 5-28; Molan, P.C., 1992. The antibacterial activity of honey. 2: variation in the potency of the antibacterial activity. Bee World 73 (2) 59-76; Molan, P.C., 1992. Medicinal uses for honey. Beekeepers Quarterly 26; Molan, P.C., 1997. Finding New Zealand honeys with outstanding antibacterial and antifungal activity. New Zealand Beekeeper 4 (10) 20-26]. The current bioassays for determining this antimicrobial effect employ a well diffusion (Ahn and Stiles, 1990) [Ahn, C., Stiles, M.E., 1990. Antibacterial activity of lactic acid bacteria isolated from vacuum-packed meats. Journal of Applied Bacteriology 69, 302-310], (Weston et al., 1999) [Weston, R.J., Mitchell, K.R., Allen, K.L., 1999. Antibacterial phenolic components of New Zealand manuka honey. J. Food Chem. 64, 295-301] or disc diffusion (Taormina et al., 2001) [Taormina, Peter J., Niemira, Brendan A., Beuchat, Larry R., 2001. Inhibitory activity of honey against food borne pathogens as influenced by the presence of hydrogen peroxide and level of antioxidant power. Int. J. Food Microbiol. 69, 217-225] assay using zones of inhibition as indicators of bacterial susceptibility. The development of a 24-h spectrophotometric assay employing 96-well microtiter plates, that is more sensitive and more amenable to statistical analysis than the assays currently employed, was undertaken. This simple and rapid assay permits extensive kinetic studies even in the presence of low honey concentrations, and is capable of detecting inhibitory levels below those recorded for well or disc diffusion assays. In this paper, we compare the assay to both well and disc diffusion assays. The results we obtained for the spectrophotometric method MIC values show that this method has greater sensitivity than the standard well and disc diffusion assays. In addition, inter- and intra-assay variance for this method was investigated, demonstrating the methods reproducibility and repeatability.  相似文献   

16.
Src homology 2 (SH2) domains exist in many intracellular proteins and have well characterized roles in signal transduction. SH2 domains bind to phosphotyrosine (Tyr(P))-containing proteins. Although tyrosine phosphorylation is essential for protein-SH2 domain interactions, the binding specificity also derives from sequences C-terminal to the Tyr(P) residue. The high affinity and specificity of this interaction is critical for precluding aberrant cross-talk between signaling pathways. The p85alpha subunit of phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI 3-kinase) contains two SH2 domains, and it has been proposed that in competition with Tyr(P) binding they may also mediate membrane attachment via interactions with phosphoinositide products of PI 3-kinase. We used nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and biosensor experiments to investigate interactions between the p85alpha SH2 domains and phosphoinositides or inositol polyphosphates. We reported previously a similar approach when demonstrating that some pleckstrin homology domains show binding specificity for distinct phosphoinositides (Salim, K., Bottomley, M. J., Querfurth, E., Zvelebil, M. J., Gout, I., Scaife, R., Margolis, R. L., Gigg, R., Smith, C. I., Driscoll, P. C., Waterfield, M. D., and Panayotou, G. (1996) EMBO J. 15, 6241-6250). However, neither SH2 domain exhibited binding specificity for phosphoinositides in phospholipid bilayers. We show that the p85alpha SH2 domain Tyr(P) binding pockets indiscriminately accommodate phosphoinositides and inositol polyphosphates. Binding of the SH2 domains to Tyr(P) peptides was only poorly competed for by phosphoinositides or inositol polyphosphates. We conclude that these ligands do not bind p85alpha SH2 domains with high affinity or specificity. Moreover, we observed that although wortmannin blocks PI 3-kinase activity in vivo, it does not affect the ability of tyrosine-phosphorylated proteins to bind to p85alpha. Consequently phosphoinositide products of PI 3-kinase are unlikely to regulate signaling through p85alpha SH2 domains.  相似文献   

17.
A new multiplex PCR and two specific TaqMan assays were developed to target the emerging pathogens A. butzleri and A. cryaerophilus. The assays also included an internal control to verify the presence of bacterial target DNA and amplification integrity. The multiplex assay used a published primer set (CRY1 and CRY2) for detecting A. cryaerophilus DNA (Houf, K., Tutenel, A., De Zutter, L., Van Hoof, J. and Vandamme, P., 2000. Development of a multiplex PCR assay for the simultaneous detection and identification of Arcobacter butzleri, Arcobacter cryaerophilus and Arcobacter skirrowii. FEMS microbiology letters, 193 (1): 89-94.) and a novel A. butzleri primer set designed to target the rpoB/C gene sequences. To improve sample throughput and assay sensitivity a TaqMan assay for each Arcobacter spp. was developed which again utilised the heterogeneity contained in the rpoB/C and 23s rRNA gene sequences. The two TaqMan assays provided >2 log improvement in detection sensitivity for both Arcobacter spp. compared with the multiplex PCR assay and were able to detect <10 CFU per PCR reaction. To evaluate the effectiveness of the Arcobacter TaqMan assays with field isolates the assays were used to screen DNA samples prepared from faecal, hide and environmental samples obtained from two meat processing plants. In these studies, the TaqMan assays revealed that 2/150 (1.3%) samples were A. butzleri-positive, 11/150 (7.3%) were A. cryaerophilus-positive and the identity of generated amplicons was confirmed by DNA sequencing. Our results show that these TaqMan assays provide improvements in sensitivity and species-representation over other published Arcobacter PCR assays and they are compatible with detecting Arcobacters in sub-optimal matrices.  相似文献   

18.
The Stanford Microarray Database (SMD) stores raw and normalized data from microarray experiments, and provides web interfaces for researchers to retrieve, analyze and visualize their data. The two immediate goals for SMD are to serve as a storage site for microarray data from ongoing research at Stanford University, and to facilitate the public dissemination of that data once published, or released by the researcher. Of paramount importance is the connection of microarray data with the biological data that pertains to the DNA deposited on the microarray (genes, clones etc.). SMD makes use of many public resources to connect expression information to the relevant biology, including SGD [Ball,C.A., Dolinski,K., Dwight,S.S., Harris,M.A., Issel-Tarver,L., Kasarskis,A., Scafe,C.R., Sherlock,G., Binkley,G., Jin,H. et al. (2000) Nucleic Acids Res., 28, 77-80], YPD and WormPD [Costanzo,M.C., Hogan,J.D., Cusick,M.E., Davis,B.P., Fancher,A.M., Hodges,P.E., Kondu,P., Lengieza,C., Lew-Smith,J.E., Lingner,C. et al. (2000) Nucleic Acids Res., 28, 73-76], Unigene [Wheeler,D.L., Chappey,C., Lash,A.E., Leipe,D.D., Madden,T.L., Schuler,G.D., Tatusova,T.A. and Rapp,B.A. (2000) Nucleic Acids Res., 28, 10-14], dbEST [Boguski,M.S., Lowe,T.M. and Tolstoshev,C.M. (1993) Nature Genet., 4, 332-333] and SWISS-PROT [Bairoch,A. and Apweiler,R. (2000) Nucleic Acids Res., 28, 45-48] and can be accessed at http://genome-www.stanford.edu/microarray.  相似文献   

19.
Bead-based microfluidic immunoassays: the next generation   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
Microfluidic devices possess many advantages like high throughput, short analysis time, small volume and high sensitivity that fulfill all the important criteria of an immunoassay used for clinical diagnoses, environmental analyses and biochemical studies. These devices can be made from a few different materials, with polymers presently emerging as the most popular choice. Other than being optically clear, non-toxic and cheap, polymers can also be easily fabricated with a variety of techniques. In addition, there are many polymer surface modification methods available to improve the efficiency of these devices. Unfortunately, current microfluidic immunoassays have limited multiplexing capability compared to flow cytometric assays. Flow cytometry employ the use of encoded microbeads in contrast with normal or paramagnetic microbeads applied in current microfluidic devices. The encoded microbead is the key in providing multiplexing capability to the assay by allowing multi-analyte analysis. Using several unique sets of code, different analytes can be detected in a single assay by tracing the identity of individual beads. The same principle could be applied to microfluidic immunoassays in order to retain all the advantages of a fluidic device and significantly improve multiplexing capability.  相似文献   

20.
Using a newly developed fluorescent nanoparticle (NP) that gives rise to a high-intensity and stable fluorescent light, a sensitive antibody (Ab) microarray assay system has been developed for specific detection of bioterrorism agents, as exemplified by ricin, cholera toxin (CT), and staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB). The Ab microarray uses a sandwich format that consists of capture Abs, analytes (toxins), biotinylated detection Abs, and avidin-conjugated NP. In all three cases, polyclonal Abs (pAbs) displayed superiority over monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) in capturing toxins on microarray slides even when the pAbs and mAbs had similar affinity as determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). The detection system was successfully used to detect toxins spiked in milk, apple cider, and blood samples. We were able to detect ricin at 100 pg/ml in buffer and at 1 ng/ml in spiked apple cider or milk, whereas CT and SEB were detected at 10 pg/ml in buffer and 100 pg/ml in spiked apple cider or milk. High specificities were also demonstrated in the detection of mixed toxin samples with similar sensitivities. The matrix effect of blood samples on the detection of mixed toxins seems to be minimal when the toxin concentration is at or above 100 ng/ml. The current study highlights the significant role of pAb and NP in increasing selectivity and sensitivity of toxin detection in a microarray format.  相似文献   

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