| Literature DB >> 22496610 |
Steven M Hira1, Khaled Aledealat, Kan-Sheng Chen, Mark Field, Gerard J Sullivan, P Bryant Chase, Peng Xiong, Stephan von Molnár, Geoffrey F Strouse.
Abstract
Sensing biological agents at the genomic level, while enhancing the response time for biodetection over commonly used, optics-based techniques such as nucleic acid microarrays or enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs), is an important criterion for new biosensors. Here, we describe the successful detection of a 35-base, single-strand nucleic acid target by Hall-based magnetic transduction as a mimic for pathogenic DNA target detection. The detection platform has low background, large signal amplification following target binding and can discriminate a single, 350 nm superparamagnetic bead labeled with DNA. Detection of the target sequence was demonstrated at 364 pM (<2 target DNA strands per bead) target DNA in the presence of 36 μM nontarget (noncomplementary) DNA (<10 ppm target DNA) using optical microscopy detection on a GaAs Hall mimic. The use of Hall magnetometers as magnetic transduction biosensors holds promise for multiplexing applications that can greatly improve point-of-care (POC) diagnostics and subsequent medical care.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22496610 PMCID: PMC3303874 DOI: 10.1155/2012/492730
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biomed Biotechnol ISSN: 1110-7243
Figure 1Generalized schematic for the detection of label-free target DNA using Hall magnetometry. The label-free target DNA (black) is detected by immobilization at the Hall device via complementary base pairing with receptor DNA (blue) preassembled on the Hall device surface to additional complementary probe DNA (red) with an internal fluorescent marker preconjugated to the surface of a magnetic nanobead resulting in a detectable Hall signal. Nanobead is not drawn to scale.
Figure 2(a) Optical microscopy characterization (wide-field fluorescence and DIC overlay) of three-strand DNA assembly is shown by the presence of green fluorescence indicating the presence of probe DNA. (b) SEM was used to evaluate the location and to quantify the number of nanobeads contributing to the Hall response for (iii), where the grey box designates the location of the underlying Hall junction. (c) Hall responses for three active junctions (i, ii, iii) and a single control junction (iiic) are plotted as Hall voltage offset versus time; the presence of nanobeads over the active Hall junctions results in a drop in Hall voltage when a dc magnetic field is applied. (d) The theoretical device signal stemming from a single 344 nm SPM bead is shown to the right as a function of position over the Hall junction further illustrating the local sensitivity of Hall magnetometry. Scale bars = 2 μm in (a) and (b).
Figure 3Sequence-specific two-strand DNA assembly and subsequent Hall detection of a single 344 nm nanobead. (a) Pictorial representation of two-strand DNA assembly, where the probe DNA (red) is complementary to the receptor DNA (blue). (b) Hall response data for the active (iv) and control Hall junction (ivc) plotted as Hall voltage versus time, where the drop in Hall voltage corresponds to the presence of a magnetic nanobead. (c) SEM was used to confirm that only one nanobead contributed significantly to the signal measured in (iv); scale bar = 2 μm. (d) The theoretical Hall device cross-sectional response for a single 344 nm SPM bead as a function of position from the center of the junction, where red indicates strongest change in voltage, aqua indicates weakest voltage change, and blue indicates a negative voltage readout. The noise floor for the device is outlined in black for reference.
Figure 4Three-strand DNA assembly on a mimic array (patterned on a GaAs substrate) for (a) complementary target only and (c) 10 ppm target in nontarget DNA. The inlays in the lower left of (a) and (c) are an enlarged portion of (a) and (c), respectively. Scale bars = 50 μm. (b) A line scan of the wide-field fluorescence microscopy image in (a) showing fluorescein-labeled probe DNA (green) and DIC (black) intensity correlates fluorescence intensity with nanobeads located primarily over gold pads, where the black arrows signify the presence of a small number of nonspecifically bound nanobeads.