Inkjet-printed point-of-care immunoassay on a nanoscale polymer brush enables subpicomolar detection of analytes in blood

The ELISA is the mainstay for sensitive and quantitative detection of protein analytes. Despite its utility, ELISA is time-consuming, resource-intensive, and infrastructure-dependent, limiting its availability in resource-limited regions. Here, we describe a self-contained immunoassay platform (the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS 2017-08, Vol.114 (34), p.E7054-E7062
Hauptverfasser: Joh, Daniel Y., Hucknall, Angus M., Wei, Qingshan, Mason, Kelly A., Lund, Margaret L., Fontes, Cassio M., Hill, Ryan T., Blair, Rebecca, Zimmers, Zackary, Achar, Rohan K., Tseng, Derek, Gordan, Raluca, Freemark, Michael, Ozcan, Aydogan, Chilkoti, Ashutosh
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The ELISA is the mainstay for sensitive and quantitative detection of protein analytes. Despite its utility, ELISA is time-consuming, resource-intensive, and infrastructure-dependent, limiting its availability in resource-limited regions. Here, we describe a self-contained immunoassay platform (the “D4 assay”) that converts the sandwich immunoassay into a point-of-care test (POCT). The D4 assay is fabricated by inkjet printing assay reagents as microarrays on nanoscale polymer brushes on glass chips, so that all reagents are “on-chip,” and these chips show durable storage stability without cold storage. The D4 assay can interrogate multiple analytes from a drop of blood, is compatible with a smartphone detector, and displays analytical figures of merit that are comparable to standard laboratory-based ELISA in whole blood. These attributes of the D4 POCT have the potential to democratize access to high-performance immunoassays in resource-limited settings without sacrificing their performance.
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1703200114