| Literature DB >> 29142249 |
Xing Guo1, Shengbo Sang2, Jinyu Guo1, Aoqun Jian1, Qianqian Duan1, Jianlong Ji1, Qiang Zhang1, Wendong Zhang1.
Abstract
A wireless magnetoelastic (ME) biosensor immobilized with E2 glycoprotein was first developed to detect classical swine fever virus (CSFV) E2 antibody. The detection principle is that a sandwich complex of CSFV E2 - rabbit anti-CSFV E2 antibody - alkaline phosphatase (AP) conjugated goat anti-rabbit IgG formed on the ME sensor surface, with biocatalytic precipitation used to amplify the mass change of antigen-antibody specific binding reaction, induces a significant change in resonance frequency of the biosensor. Due to its magnetostrictive feature, the resonance vibrations and resonance frequency can be actuated and wirelessly monitored through magnetic fields. The experimental results show that resonance frequency shift increases with the augmentation of the CSFV E2 antibody concentration. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy-dispersive spectroscopy (EDS) and fluorescence microscopy analysis proved that the modification and detection process were successful. The biosensor shows a linear response to the logarithm of CSFV E2 antibody concentrations ranging from 5 ng/mL to 10 μg/mL, with a detection limit (LOD) of 2.466 ng/mL and the sensitivity of 56.2 Hz/μg·mL-1. The study provides a low-cost yet highly-sensitive and wireless method for selective detection of CSFV E2 antibody.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29142249 PMCID: PMC5688166 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-15908-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Schematic representation of the procedures of the ME biosensors functionalization.
Figure 2The schematic representation of wireless ME biosensor measurement system.
Figure 3(a) SEM image of the gold-coated sensor surface. (b) SEM image of biosensor surface after CSFV E2 immobilization. (c) EDS spectrum of the biosensor surface before and after the CSFV E2 immobilization.
Figure 4(a) Schematic diagram of FITC-labeled anti-CSFV E2 antibody captured by CSFV E2 modified on the biosensor surface. Fluorescence images of biosensors coated with CSFV E2 at different concentrations, including (b) 0 , (c) 10 , (d) 30 , (e) 50 .
Figure 5Time-dependent frequency responses at different anti-CSFV E2 antibody concentrations ranging from 0 to 10 .
Figure 6Calibration curve: the 50 min shift in resonance frequency as a function of different anti-CSFV E2 antibody concentrations.
Comparisons of performances between various methods for CSFV E2 antibody detection.
| Methods | Sensitivity/ Detection limit | Cost | Ease of use | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ME biosensor | 56.2 | US$ 0.001/sensor; several minutes | Minimum skill; smaller size | This work |
| Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) | 10 | 1.5 hr | Needs skill |
|
| ELISA | 100 | Time-consuming | Labor-intensive |
|
| Neutralizing assay | Time-consuming | Well set up cell culture laboratory |
| |
| Single dilution immunoassay | Costly purification procedures | Work-intensive |
|
Figure 7Real-time response of the ME biosensor to other interferents with the concentration of 10 .