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Wash-free non-spectroscopic optical immunoassay by controlling retroreflective microparticle movement in a microfluidic chip
  • Kim, Ka Ram ;
  • Chun, Hyeong Jin ;
  • Lee, Kyung Won ;
  • Jeong, Kwan Young ;
  • Kim, Jae Ho ;
  • Yoon, Hyun C.
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Publication Year
2019-12-07
Publisher
Royal Society of Chemistry
Citation
Lab on a Chip, Vol.19, pp.3931-3942
Mesh Keyword
Cardiac infarctionEfficient designsMicrofluidic channelMicrofluidic chipPoint-of-care testingSedimentation characteristicTime-lapse imagingTransparent substrateHumansImmunoassayLab-On-A-Chip DevicesMultifunctional NanoparticlesParticle SizePolymethyl MethacrylateSurface Properties
All Science Classification Codes (ASJC)
BioengineeringBiochemistryChemistry (all)Biomedical Engineering
Abstract
Here, we proposed a retroreflective optical immunoassay platform by introducing the intrinsic sedimentation characteristics of a micro-retroreflector, namely retroreflective Janus particles (RJPs), wherein the sediment-based passive movement of RJPs minimised the random errors due to human involvement and resulted in a simple procedure that does not require the washing step, to follow the concept of point-of-care testing. The transparent sensing interface and the sedimentation property of RJPs were combined to develop a practical retroreflective immunoassay platform. For the sensing surface, transparent silanized poly(methyl methacrylate) was applied to the inverted focusing method. In the retroreflection phenomenon, as the incident light returns to its source by the retroreflector, efficient design of the retroreflective optical path between the light source and retroreflector can be crucial in signal registration. While preparing the RJP-bound transparent substrate on the microfluidic channel, the signal could be achieved more efficiently by directly focusing on the sensing interface, and not via the fluidic channels. To integrate this to build an immunoassay protocol, the sedimentation property of RJPs was employed for microfluidic chip inversion-based particle movement control, which was utilised for both luring and separating RJPs on the sensing surface, resulting in a wash-free immunoassay without any human involvement. To ensure accurate analysis, a time-lapse imaging-based image processing was conducted to eliminate the non-specific signals. To validate the applicability of the proposed immunoassay platform, quantification of acute cardiac infarction marker creatine kinase-MB was performed.
Language
eng
URI
https://dspace.ajou.ac.kr/dev/handle/2018.oak/31017
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1039/c9lc00973f
Fulltext

Type
Article
Funding
This research was mainly supported by the Samsung Research Funding Centre of Samsung Electronics under the Project Number SRFC-IT1401-51. We also acknowledge the support from the Creative Materials Discovery Program (NRF-2019M3D1A1078943) and the Priority Research Centres Program (NRF-2019R1A6A1A11051471) funded by the National Research Foundation of Korea.
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