| Literature DB >> 26842269 |
Aarti Jain1, Omid Taghavian1, Derek Vallejo2, Emmanuel Dotsey1, Dan Schwartz3, Florian G Bell3, Chad Greef3, D Huw Davies1, Jennipher Grudzien3, Abraham P Lee2, Philip L Felgner1, Li Liang1.
Abstract
Organic fluorescent dyes are widely used for the visualization of bound antibody in a variety of immunofluorescence assays. However, the detection equipment is often expensive, fragile, and hard to deploy widely. Quantum dots (Qdot) are nanocrystals made of semiconductor materials that emit light at different wavelengths according to the size of the crystal, with increased brightness and stability. Here, we have evaluated a small benchtop "personal" optical imager (ArrayCAM) developed for quantification of protein arrays probed by Qdot-based indirect immunofluorescence. The aim was to determine if the Qdot imager system provides equivalent data to the conventional organic dye-labeled antibody/laser scanner system. To do this, duplicate proteome microarrays of Vaccinia virus, Brucella melitensis and Plasmodium falciparum were probed with identical samples of immune sera, and IgG, IgA, and IgM profiles visualized using biotinylated secondary antibodies followed by a tertiary reagent of streptavidin coupled to either P3 (an organic cyanine dye typically used for microarrays) or Q800 (Qdot). The data show excellent correlation for all samples tested (R > 0.8) with no significant change of antibody reactivity profiles. We conclude that Qdot detection provides data equivalent to that obtained using conventional organic dye detection. The portable imager offers an economical, more robust, and deployable alternative to conventional laser array scanners.Entities:
Keywords: Antibody; Diagnostics; Protein microarray; Quantum dots
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26842269 PMCID: PMC4973892 DOI: 10.1002/pmic.201500375
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Proteomics ISSN: 1615-9853 Impact factor: 3.984