Publication | Closed Access
Quantitation of Femtomolar Protein Levels via Direct Readout with the Electrochemical Proximity Assay
172
Citations
30
References
2012
Year
EngineeringMolecular BiologyThrombin AptamersBioanalysisMethylene BlueAnalytical ChemistryClinical ChemistryDna ComputingAnalytical BiotechnologyProteomicsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryBiomolecular AnalysisOligonucleotideHuman ThrombinElectrochemical Proximity AssayBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesBioelectronicsProtein Mass SpectrometryNucleic Acid AmplificationProtein EngineeringFemtomolar Protein LevelsDirect Readout
We have developed a separation-free, electrochemical assay format with direct readout that is amenable to highly sensitive and selective quantitation of a wide variety of target proteins. Our first generation of the electrochemical proximity assay (ECPA) is composed of two thrombin aptamers which form a cooperative complex only in the presence of target molecules, moving a methylene blue (MB)-conjugated oligonucleotide close to a gold electrode. Without washing steps, electrical current is increased in proportion to the concentration of a specific target protein. By employing a DNA-based experimental model with the aptamer system, we show that addition of a short DNA competitor can reduce background current of the MB peak to baseline levels. As such, the detection limit of aptamer-based ECPA for human thrombin was 50 pM via direct readout. The dual-probe nature of ECPA gave high selectivity and 93% recovery of signal from 2.5 nM thrombin in 2% bovine serum albumin (BSA). To greatly improve the flexibility of ECPA, we then proved the system functional with antibody-oligonucleotide conjugates as probes; the insulin detection limit was 128 fM with a dynamic range of over 4 orders of magnitude in concentration, again with high assay selectivity. ECPA thus allows separation-free, highly sensitive, and highly selective protein detection with a direct electrochemical readout. This method is extremely flexible, capable of detecting a wide variety of protein targets, and is amenable to point-of-care protein measurement, since any target with two aptamers or antibodies could be assayed via direct electrochemical readout.
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