Miniaturization of a Homogeneous Fluorescence Immunoassay Based on Energy Transfer Using Nanotiter Plates as High-Density Sample Carriers
- 28 September 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Analytical Chemistry
- Vol. 73 (21) , 5172-5179
- https://doi.org/10.1021/ac010456e
Abstract
The miniaturization of a homogeneous competitive immunoassay to a final assay volume of 70 nL is described. As the sample carrier, disposable plastic nanotiter plates (NTP) with dimensions of 2 x 2 cm2 containing 25 x 25 wells, corresponding to approximately 15,000 wells on a traditional 96-well microtiter plate footprint, were used. Sample handling was accomplished by a piezoelectrically actuated micropipet. To reduce evaporation while pipetting the assays, the NTP was handled in a closed humid chamber and cooled to the point of condensation. To avoid washing steps, a homogeneous assay was developed that was based on energy-transfer (ET). As a model system, an antibody-based assay for the detection of the environmentally relevant compound, simazine, in drinking water was chosen. Antibodies were labeled with the long-wavelength-excitable sulfoindocyanine dye Cy5 (donor), and a tracer was synthesized by labeling BSA with a triazine derivative and the acceptor dye Cy5.5. At low analyte concentrations, the tracer was preferably bound to the antibody binding sites. As a result of the close proximity of Cy5.5 and Cy5, an efficient quenching of the Cy5 fluorescence occurred. Higher analyte concentrations led to a progressive binding of the analyte to the antibody binding sites. The increased Cy5 fluorescence was determined by using a scanning laser-induced fluorescence detector. The limit of detection (LOD), using an antibody concentration of 20 nM, was 0.32 microg/L, or 1.11 x 10(-16) mol of simazine. In comparison, the LOD of the 96-well microtiter-plate-based ET immunoassay (micro-ETIA) was 0.15 microg/L, or 1.87 x 10(-13) mol. The LOD of the optimized micro-ETIA at 1 nM IgG, was 0.01 microg/L.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Subnanoliter Volume Wall-Jet Cells Combined with Interdigitated Microarray Electrode and Enzyme Modified Planar MicroelectrodeAnalytical Chemistry, 2000
- Design and development of a silicon microfabricated flow-through dispenser for on-line picolitre sample handlingJournal of Micromechanics and Microengineering, 1999
- New Donor−Acceptor Pair for Fluorescent Immunoassays by Energy TransferBioconjugate Chemistry, 1999
- Miniaturized FRET assays and microfluidics: key components for ultra-high-throughput screeningDrug Discovery Today, 1999
- What is the Future of High Throughput Screening?SLAS Discovery, 1999
- Immunoassay on a single microparticle: the effect of particle size and number on a miniaturized time-resolved fluorometric assay of free prostate-specific antigenAnalytica Chimica Acta, 1999
- Assay Miniaturization for Ultra-High Throughput Screening of Combinatorial and Discrete Compound Libraries: A 9600-Well (0.2 Microliter) Assay SystemSLAS Discovery, 1998
- Microformat Imaging ELISA for Pesticide DeterminationAnalytical Chemistry, 1996
- Imaging in the far‐red with electronic light microscopy: Requirements and limitationsJournal of Microscopy, 1994
- Cyanine dye labeling reagents: Sulfoindocyanine succinimidyl estersBioconjugate Chemistry, 1993