Publication | Closed Access
Microfluidic device for immunoassays based on surface plasmon resonance imaging
139
Citations
22
References
2008
Year
NanoparticlesNanomedicineMicrofluidic DeviceEngineeringBiosensing SystemsBiomedical DiagnosticsAnalytical MicrosystemsLab-on-a-chipBiomedical AnalysisOrgan-on-a-chipBiomedical EngineeringSurface Plasmon ResonanceNanosensorBiomemsMicrofluidicsBiophysicsGold NanoparticlesPlasmonic Material
We have designed and fabricated a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microfluidic device containing an array of gold spots onto which antigens or antibodies of interest can be attached. We use surface plasmon resonance (SPR) imaging to monitor the antibody-antigen recognition and binding events. This combination offers two significant advantages: (1) the microfluidic device dramatically reduces reaction time and sample consumption; and (2) the SPR imaging yields real-time detection of the immunocomplex formation. Thus, an immunoreaction may be detected and quantitatively characterized in about 10 min. The sensitivity of this method is at the subnanomolar level. When gold nanoparticles are selectively coupled to the immunocomplex to cause signal amplification, the sensitivity reaches the ten to one hundred picomolar level but the time required increases to about 60 min.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1