| Literature DB >> 31801193 |
Benita Johannsen1, Lara Müller1, Desirée Baumgartner1,2, Lena Karkossa1, Susanna M Früh1,2, Nagihan Bostanci3, Michal Karpíšek4,5, Roland Zengerle1,2, Nils Paust1,2, Konstantinos Mitsakakis1,2.
Abstract
Saliva offers many advantages for point-of-care (PoC) diagnostic applications due to non-invasive, easy, and cost-effective methods of collection. However, the complex matrix with its non-Newtonian behavior and high viscosity poses handling challenges. Several tedious and long pre-analytic steps, incompatible with PoC use, are required to liquefy and homogenize saliva samples before protein analysis can be performed. We apply magnet-beating to reduce hands-on time and to simplify sample preparation. A magnet in a chamber containing the whole saliva is actuated inside a centrifugal microfluidic cartridge by the interplay of centrifugal and magnetic forces. Rigorous mixing, which homogenizes the saliva sample, is then initiated. Consequently, fewer manual steps are required to introduce the whole saliva into the cartridge. After 4 min of magnet-beating, the processed sample can be used for protein analysis. The viscosity of whole saliva has been reduced from 10.4 to 2.3 mPa s. Immunoassay results after magnet-beating for three salivary periodontal markers (MMP-8, MMP-9, TIMP-1) showed a linear correlation with a slope of 0.99 when compared to results of reference method treated samples. Conclusively, magnet-beating has been shown to be a suitable method for the pre-analytic processing of whole saliva for fully automated PoC protein analysis.Entities:
Keywords: ELISA; centrifugal microfluidics; diagnostics; immunoassay; magnet-beating; point-of-care; pre-analytics; protein biomarkers; whole saliva
Year: 2019 PMID: 31801193 PMCID: PMC6952956 DOI: 10.3390/mi10120833
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Micromachines (Basel) ISSN: 2072-666X Impact factor: 2.891
Figure 1Top: Schematic description of the most widely used pre-analytic workflow (reference method) for whole saliva treatment for protein analysis. It includes the collection of the sample and a freezing step which can last a day or longer. The next steps are thawing at 4 °C and centrifugation to separate the pellet from the supernatant. The supernatant is then used for further protein analysis. Bottom: The magnet-beating workflow includes only the collection of the sample and pipetting onto the disk. The magnet-beating itself is completely automated and conducted at room temperature. The sample can be either processed further in situ (on disk) or ex situ (transferred to another device).
Figure 2(a) Schematic illustration of the magnet-beating workflow on the disk, indicating the location of the external magnets which are mounted beneath the lid of the LabDisk Player [36]. The motion of the bar-shaped magnet under the influence of the magnetic and centrifugal forces and the orientation of its axis with respect to the chamber axis are illustrated in a simplified way (red arrows); (b) (A) The bar-shaped magnet is moved towards the radially outer edge of the chamber by the centrifugal force. (B) The force exerted by the external magnet moves the bar-shaped magnet in the chamber radially inwards through the saliva. (C,D) The bar-shaped magnet is moved radially outwards again by the now dominant centrifugal forces.
Figure 3Viscosity of water as a reference for a Newtonian fluid, whole saliva (untreated) as a non-Newtonian fluid, whole saliva treated with magnet-beating, and whole saliva treated with the reference method. All measurements of the three latter cases were conducted on the same samples (N = 3).
Representative measurements of viscosity (N = 3) of untreated whole saliva, and treated with reference and magnet-beating methods at low and high shear rates. The full shear rate range can be seen in Figure 3.
| Treatment | Shear rate [1/s] | Mean viscosity [mPa s] | Standard deviation [mPa s] |
|---|---|---|---|
| None | 50 | 10.4 | 4.1 |
| 3000 | 1.9 | 0.3 | |
| Reference method | 50 | 2.7 | 0.8 |
| 3000 | 1.4 | 0.1 | |
| Magnet-beating | 50 | 2.3 | 0.9 |
| 3000 | 1.4 | 0.1 |
Figure 4Protein concentration of the oral biomarkers MMP-8, MMP-9, and TIMP-1 obtained with ELISA after whole saliva processing using the reference method versus the magnet-beating method (N = 8).