Literature DB >> 15088378

Incorporating fluorescent dyes and quantum dots into magnetic microbeads for immunoassays.

Shawn P Mulvaney1, Heidi M Mattoussi, Lloyd J Whitman.   

Abstract

Microbeads that are both paramagnetic and fluorescently labeled are commercially available in colors spanning the visible spectrum. Although these commercial beads can be bright, polydispersity in both size and fluorescent intensity limit their use in quantitative assays. Very recently, more monodisperse beads have become available, but their large size and surface properties make them less than ideal for some bioassay applications. Here we describe methods to customize commercial nonfluorescent magnetic microparticles with fluorescent dyes and quantum dots (QDs) without affecting their magnetic or surface chemical properties. Fluorescent dyes and 3.3-nm diameter CdSe/ZnS QDs were sequestered within 0.8-micron diameter magnetic beads by swelling the polystyrene matrix of the bead in organic solvent, letting the chromophores partition, and then collapsing the matrix in polar solvents. Chromophore incorporation has been characterized using both UV-visible absorption spectroscopy and fluorescence microscopy, with an average of 3 x 10(8) rhodamine 6G molecules/bead and 6 x 10(4) QDs/bead. The modified beads are uniform in size and intensity, with optical properties comparable to currently available commercial beads. Immunoassay results obtained with our custom fluorescent magnetic microbeads are consistent with those obtained using conventional magnetic microbeads.

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Year:  2004        PMID: 15088378     DOI: 10.2144/04364BI01

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biotechniques        ISSN: 0736-6205            Impact factor:   1.993


  8 in total

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Authors:  Dosi Dosev; Mikaela Nichkova; Randy K Dumas; Shirley J Gee; Bruce D Hammock; Kai Liu; Ian M Kennedy
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4.  Magnetic fluorescent composite nanoparticles for the fluoroimmunoassays of Newcastle disease virus and avian virus arthritis virus.

Authors:  Guannan Wang; Ping Xie; Chengrui Xiao; Pingfan Yuan; Xingguang Su
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5.  Design Considerations for CMOS-Integrated Hall-Effect Magnetic Bead Detectors for Biosensor Applications.

Authors:  K Skucha; S Gambini; P Liu; M Megens; J Kim; Be Boser
Journal:  J Microelectromech Syst       Date:  2013-06-05       Impact factor: 2.417

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Authors:  Mikaela Nichkova; Dosi Dosev; Shirley J Gee; Bruce D Hammock; Ian M Kennedy
Journal:  Anal Biochem       Date:  2007-06-27       Impact factor: 3.365

7.  Simple Fabrication of Structured Magnetic Metallic Nano-Platelets for Bio-Analytical Applications.

Authors:  Jakub Novotny; Petra Juskova; Rudolf Kupcik; Zuzana Bilkova; Frantisek Foret
Journal:  Micromachines (Basel)       Date:  2019-02-03       Impact factor: 2.891

8.  Luminescence encoding of polymer microbeads with organic dyes and semiconductor quantum dots during polymerization.

Authors:  Lena Scholtz; J Gerrit Eckert; Toufiq Elahi; Franziska Lübkemann; Oskar Hübner; Nadja C Bigall; Ute Resch-Genger
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-07-14       Impact factor: 4.996

  8 in total

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