Literature DB >> 26195743

Multitarget, quantitative nanoplasmonic electrical field-enhanced resonating device (NE2RD) for diagnostics.

Fatih Inci1, Chiara Filippini2, Murat Baday3, Mehmet Ozgun Ozen1, Semih Calamak1, Naside Gozde Durmus4, ShuQi Wang5, Emily Hanhauser6, Kristen S Hobbs6, Franceline Juillard2, Ping Ping Kuang7, Michael L Vetter8, Margot Carocci8, Hidemi S Yamamoto9, Yuko Takagi8, Umit Hakan Yildiz1, Demir Akin10, Duane R Wesemann11, Amit Singhal12, Priscilla L Yang8, Max L Nibert8, Raina N Fichorova9, Daryl T-Y Lau7, Timothy J Henrich6, Kenneth M Kaye2, Steven C Schachter13, Daniel R Kuritzkes6, Lars M Steinmetz14, Sanjiv S Gambhir15, Ronald W Davis16, Utkan Demirci17.   

Abstract

Recent advances in biosensing technologies present great potential for medical diagnostics, thus improving clinical decisions. However, creating a label-free general sensing platform capable of detecting multiple biotargets in various clinical specimens over a wide dynamic range, without lengthy sample-processing steps, remains a considerable challenge. In practice, these barriers prevent broad applications in clinics and at patients' homes. Here, we demonstrate the nanoplasmonic electrical field-enhanced resonating device (NE(2)RD), which addresses all these impediments on a single platform. The NE(2)RD employs an immunodetection assay to capture biotargets, and precisely measures spectral color changes by their wavelength and extinction intensity shifts in nanoparticles without prior sample labeling or preprocessing. We present through multiple examples, a label-free, quantitative, portable, multitarget platform by rapidly detecting various protein biomarkers, drugs, protein allergens, bacteria, eukaryotic cells, and distinct viruses. The linear dynamic range of NE(2)RD is five orders of magnitude broader than ELISA, with a sensitivity down to 400 fg/mL This range and sensitivity are achieved by self-assembling gold nanoparticles to generate hot spots on a 3D-oriented substrate for ultrasensitive measurements. We demonstrate that this precise platform handles multiple clinical samples such as whole blood, serum, and saliva without sample preprocessing under diverse conditions of temperature, pH, and ionic strength. The NE(2)RD's broad dynamic range, detection limit, and portability integrated with a disposable fluidic chip have broad applications, potentially enabling the transition toward precision medicine at the point-of-care or primary care settings and at patients' homes.

Entities:  

Keywords:  biodetection; label-free; multiple biotargets; nanoparticle; point-of-need

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26195743      PMCID: PMC4538635          DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1510824112

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A        ISSN: 0027-8424            Impact factor:   12.779


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