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Surface chemical approach to single-step measurement of antibody in human serum using localized surface plasmon resonance biosensor on microtiter plate system
Authors:Junta Yamamichi  Tetsunori Ojima  Mie Iida  Kimiko Yurugi  Takeshi Imamura  Eishi Ashihara  Shinya Kimura  Taira Maekawa
Institution:1. High Performance Sensing Research Division, Frontier Research Center, Canon Inc., Ohta-ku, Tokyo, 146-8501, Japan
2. Department of Transfusion Medicine and Cell Therapy, Kyoto University Hospital, Sakyo-ku, Kyoto, 606-8507, Japan
3. Division of Hematology, Respiratory Medicine and Oncology, Department of Internal Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, Saga University, Saga, 849-8501, Japan
Abstract:In clinical settings, serum antibody levels serve as markers of pathology. For example, antibodies related to autoimmune diseases are among the conventional targets in laboratory tests. Simple clinical tests can improve the efficacy of laboratory practice. This study describes a single-step, wash-free technique for optically detecting antibodies in human serum through the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of gold nanoparticles. As a proof-of-concept experiment, the amount of antibiotin dissolved in human serum was measured with a LSPR-based biosensor in a wash-free manner using a conventional 96-well microtiter plate and a plate reader. For an efficient surface modification of biosensors, zwitterionic copolymer was used as a scaffold on the gold nanoparticle surface to immobilize antigen and blocking reagent. Single-step, wash-free measurement of antibiotin in human serum was successfully achieved. In addition, nonspecific responses from serum contents were significantly reduced because both the copolymer and hydrophilic antigen reagent that we employed were composed of poly(ethylene oxide) spacer. Comparative experiments of the antigen-antibody reaction in serum to that in buffered solution revealed that serum is a favorable environment for the biological reaction. In conclusion, our gold-nanoparticle-based LSPR method may provide a rapid and simple way to measure the amount of antibody in serum quantitatively in clinical practice.
Figure
Experimental setups illustrating two different methods of surface modification for the gold nanoparticles: biotinylated BSA and zwitterionic copolymer. The amount of antibiotin that attached to biotin on the surface was measured by the peak shift of LSPR spectra using a 96-well microtiter plate with immobilized gold nanoparticles
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