Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10533767 | Analytical Biochemistry | 2005 | 11 Pages |
Abstract
Surface plasmon resonance (SPR) biosensor formats using gold nanoparticle or protein signal amplification for the sensitive assay of small molecules were developed using progesterone as a model compound. Progesterone was immobilized to a dextran surface in the Biacore biosensor through in situ covalent immobilization using an oligoethylene glycol linker attached to the 4 position of the steroid. This surface produced stable antibody binding for in excess of 1100 assay cycles. Using this surface, assays were developed for progesterone using 10- and 20-nm gold-streptavidin labels attached to biotinylated monoclonal antibody in both label prebinding and sequential binding formats. Prelabeling formats gave no signal enhancement but produced assays with limits of detection of 143Â pg/ml, compared with approximately 1Â ng/ml in previous studies. Sequential binding formats gave signal enhancements of 2.2-fold over the monoclonal antibody and a limit of detection of 23.1Â pg/ml. It was found that secondary antibody labeling gave 8.1-fold signal enhancements and a limit of detection of 20.1Â pg/ml, whereas use of secondary antibody-25Â nm gold complexes provided more signal enhancement (13-fold) and a further improvement in limit of detection of 8.6Â pg/ml.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Analytical Chemistry
Authors
John S. Mitchell, Yinqiu Wu, Christian J. Cook, Lyndsay Main,