| Literature DB >> 27845796 |
Mohammadali Safavieh1, Vivasvat Kaul1, Sultan Khetani1, Anupriya Singh1, Karan Dhingra1, Manoj Kumar Kanakasabapathy1, Mohamed Shehata Draz2, Adnan Memic3, Daniel R Kuritzkes4, Hadi Shafiee5.
Abstract
Rapid and sensitive point-of-care diagnostics are of paramount importance for early detection of infectious diseases and timely initiation of treatment. Here, we present cellulose paper and flexible plastic chips with printed graphene-modified silver electrodes as universal point-of-care diagnostic tools for the rapid and sensitive detection of microbial pathogens or nucleic acids through utilizing electrical sensing modality and loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP). We evaluated the ability of the developed paper-based assay to detect (i) viruses on cellulose-based paper microchips without implementing amplification in samples with viral loads between 106 and 108 copies per ml, and (ii) amplified HIV-1 nucleic acids in samples with viral loads between 10 fg μl-1 and 108 fg μl-1. The target HIV-1 nucleic acid was amplified using the RT-LAMP technique and detected through the electrical sensing of LAMP amplicons for a broad range of RNA concentrations between 10 fg μl-1 and 108 fg μl-1 after 40 min of amplification time. Our assay may be used for antiretroviral therapy monitoring where it meets the sensitivity requirement of the World Health Organization guidelines. Such a paper microchip assay without the amplification step may also be considered as a simple and inexpensive approach for acute HIV detection where maximum viral replication occurs.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 27845796 PMCID: PMC5695240 DOI: 10.1039/c6nr06417e
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale ISSN: 2040-3364 Impact factor: 7.790