| Literature DB >> 30424207 |
Zihao Li1, Chenggang Zhu2, Zhihe Guo3, Bowen Wang4, Xiang Wu5, Yiyan Fei6.
Abstract
The detection of small molecules has increasingly attracted the attention of researchers because of its important physiological function. In this manuscript, we propose a novel optical sensor which uses an optofluidic microbubble resonator (OFMBR) for the highly sensitive detection of small molecules. This paper demonstrates the binding of the small molecule biotin to surface-immobilized streptavidin with a detection limit reduced to 0.41 pM. Furthermore, binding specificity of four additional small molecules to surface-immobilized streptavidin is shown. A label-free OFMBR-based optical sensor has great potential in small molecule detection and drug screening because of its high sensitivity, low detection limit, and minimal sample consumption.Entities:
Keywords: detection of small molecules; label-free sensor; optofluidic microbubble resonator
Year: 2018 PMID: 30424207 PMCID: PMC6187366 DOI: 10.3390/mi9060274
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1(a) Sketch of the detection system for the OFMBR sensor; (b) Structure of the packaged OFMBR sensor.
Figure 2(a) Schematic illustration of surface functionalization of microbubble surface with epoxy groups; (b) Flow diagram of experimental processes for small biomolecule binding to surface-immobilized streptavidin.
Figure 3(a) Transmission spectra of an OFMBR before packaging in the wavelength range between 770 nm and 780 nm; (b) Transmission spectra of an OFMBR 24 h after packaging in the wavelength range between 770 nm and 780 nm; (c) Fine scan of the transmission spectra before packaging around 774.3 nm; (d) Fine scan of the transmission spectra after packaging around 774.3 nm; (e) Resonant wavelength shift of an OFMBR sensor varying with time before packaging; (f) Resonant wavelength shift of an OFMBR sensor varying with time after packaging.
Figure 4(a) Binding curves of surface-immobilized streptavidin with flowing biotin at respective concentrations of 205 pM, 410 pM, and 820 pM. Vertical lines indicate start of association and dissociation phases. Red dashed lines are global fitting results with the Langmuir reaction model; (b) Specific binding curve of surface-immobilized streptavidin with biotin at a concentration of 0.41 pM. Inset shows enlarged view of the binding curve.
Kinetic constants of biotin and magnolol binding to immobilized streptavidin.
| Small Molecule | kon (min nM)−1 | koff (min)−1 | ka (M)−1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Biotin | 0.30 | 4.5 × 10−7 | 6.7 × 1014 |
| Magnolol | 0.29 | 6.2 × 10−3 | 4.7 × 1010 |
Figure 5Real-time binding curves of small molecules (a) medetomidine HCl; (b) cetrimonium bromide; (c) reboxetine mesylate with surface-immobilized streptavidin on packaged OFMBR sensor at respective concentration of 205 pM (Insets show enlarged views of the binding curves); (d) Binding curves of surface-immobilized streptavidin with flowing magnolol at concentrations of 100 pM, 500 pM, and 1000 pM. Vertical lines are the starts of association and dissociation phases.