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A Plasmonic ELISA Based on Nanospherical Brush-Induced Signal Amplification for the Ultrasensitive Naked-eye Simultaneous Detection of the Typical Tetrabromobisphenol A Derivative and Byproduct Zhen Zhang, Nuanfei Zhu, Shuaibing Dong, Menglu Huang, Liuqing Yang, Xiangyang Wu, Zhenjiang Liu, Jiahao Jiang, and Yanmin Zou J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.7b02803 • Publication Date (Web): 01 Aug 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on August 2, 2017
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A Plasmonic ELISA Based on Nanospherical Brush-Induced Signal Amplification for the Ultrasensitive Naked-eye Simultaneous Detection of the Typical Tetrabromobisphenol A Derivative and Byproduct
6 7 8
Zhen Zhang1*, Nuanfei Zhu1, Shuaibing Dong1, Menglu Huang1, Liuqing Yang3,
9
Xiangyang Wu1*, Zhenjiang Liu1, Jiahao Jiang1, Yanmin Zou2
10 11
1
12
212013, China
13
2
School of Pharmacy, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang 212013, China
14
3
School of Chemistry & Chemical Engineering, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang 212013,
15
China
School of the Environment and Safety Engineering, Jiangsu University, Zhenjiang
16 17 18 19
* Corresponding author:
20
E-mail:
[email protected],
[email protected] 21
Fax:
+86-511-88790955
22
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Abstract
24
Based on H2O2-mediated growth of gold nanoparticle (AuNPs), a novel
25
plasmonic enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (pELISA) was developed with a
26
polyclonal antibody for the ultrasensitive simultaneous naked-eye detection of
27
tetrabromobisphenol
28
tetrabromobisphenol A mono(hydroxyethyl) ether (TBBPA MHEE), one of the major
29
derivatives and byproducts of tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA), respectively. In this
30
modified indirect competitive pELISA, glucose oxidase (GOx) played an important
31
role leading to the growth of AuNPs through a reaction between GOx and glucose to
32
produce hydrogen peroxide (H2O2). In addition, further signal amplification was
33
achieved via a large number of GOx molecules, which were immobilized on silica
34
nanoparticles carrying poly brushes (SiO2@PAA) to increase the enzyme load, and
35
the whole complex was conjugated on the second antibody. Under the optimized
36
conditions, 10-3 µg/L TBBPA DHEE can be distinguished via the observation of a
37
colored solution, and the limit of detection (LOD) of the method using a microplate
38
reader reaches 3.3×10-4 µg/L. In contrast, the sensitivity of the method was 3 orders of
39
magnitude higher than that using conventional colorimetric ELISA with the same
40
antibody. Furthermore, the proposed approach showed good repeatability and
41
reliability after a recovery test fortified with a variety of targets was performed
42
(recoveries, 78.00% - 102.79%; coefficient of variation (CV), 4.38% - 9.87%). To our
43
knowledge, this is the first case in which pELISA was applied for the detection of
44
small molecules via the production of H2O2 from GOx and glucose. The method will
A
bis(2-hydroxyetyl)
ether
(TBBPA
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DHEE)
and
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be widely used for the investigation of TBBPA DHEE and TBBPA MHEE in real
46
environments.
47
Keywords:
48
Immunoassay, Silica Nanoparticles, Glucose Oxidase, Tetrabromobisphenol A,
49
Derivative, Byproduct
Plasmonic
Enzyme-linked
Immunosorbent
50
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Assay
(pELISA),
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Introduction Tetrabromobisphenol
A bis(2-hydroxyetyl)
ether
(TBBPA DHEE)
and
53
tetrabromobisphenol A mono(hydroxyethyl) ether (TBBPA MHEE) were considered
54
as a typical derivative and byproduct of tetrabromobisphenol A (TBBPA, the most
55
extensively used brominated flame retardant), respectively1, 2, which were produced
56
both intentionally and unintentionally along with TBBPA. Some studies indicated that
57
the chemicals have similar characteristics as persistent organic pollutants, such as
58
environmental persistency and bioaccumulation3, and other research showed that the
59
pollutants were neurotoxic4. Considering that the extensive use of the chemicals could
60
result in their widespread occurrence in the environment, it is necessary to develop a
61
simple and reliable method to investigate the pollutant levels in the environment and
62
to perform a risk assessment.
63
In fact, an analytical approach has been established for the detection of TBBPA
64
MHEE using ultra-high performance liquid chromatography-Orbitrap Fusion Tribrid
65
mass spectrometry2. However, the method required extremely expensive instruments
66
and sophisticated sample pretreatment; these drawbacks limited the application of the
67
method for the analysis of a large number of environmental samples5. Although Tian
68
et al. reported a method involving derivatization with AgNO3 for TBBPA DHEE6, 7,
69
this method is difficult to be applied for real sample measurements because it can
70
damage the mass spectrometer. To solve the above-mentioned problems, we produced
71
a polyclonal antibody capable of recognizing TBBPA DHEE and TBBPA MHEE, and
72
based on this antibody, a simple, high-throughput indirect competitive enzyme-linked
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immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was established with a limit of detection (LOD) of
74
0.7018
75
Information). However, the sensitivity of the method did not meet the requirement for
76
trace
77
high-throughput immunoassays are needed.
µg/L (DOI:10.1016/j.envpol.2017.05.076,
pollutants
analysis
in
the
environment.
shown
in
Therefore,
the
more
Supporting
sensitive
78
The colorimetric assay with gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) aggregation/growth
79
garnered our attention because it could be utilized as a signal reporter for sensitive
80
naked-eye chemical and biomolecular detection without using sophisticated
81
instruments8-17, especially in the plasmonic ELISA (pELISA) application, which is
82
simple, high-throughput and sensitive12,
83
hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) is a key factor to control the accumulation of gold
84
nanoparticles. When a large amount of H2O2 exists, gold ions will quickly be reduced
85
to spherical or regular gold nanoparticles, and the reaction solution would turn red;
86
conversely, less H2O2 would bring about irregular AuNPs with a blued solution. Based
87
on which, Stevens et al. developed a sensitive sandwich pELISA that depends on the
88
catalase (CAT)-induced AuNPs growth for the determination of prostate-specific
89
antigen (PSA) and HIV-1 capsid antigen p24, whose limit of detection (LOD) was
90
10-18 g/mL21. To increase the sensitivity of traditional pELISA, Huang, X. et al.
91
introduced a nanospherical brush (SiO2@PAA) into the analytical system to decrease
92
the affinity of competing antigens and increase the catalase loading as a CAT
93
container22-24. Consequently, the LOD of the above study was 7 orders of magnitude
94
higher than that using conventional pELISA22. All of these were accomplished via
18-21
. In the assay, the concentration of
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H2O2 consumption to obtain the signals. In contrast, some research indicated that
96
glucose oxidase (GOx) was employed to produce H2O2 for colorimetric
97
measurement16, 25; hence, we speculated that the GOx-glucose system could be used in
98
pELISA as a new method to change the H2O2 concentration.
99
In this study, a novel improved indirect competitive pELISA was designed for
100
the ultrasensitive detection of TBBPA DHEE and TBBPA MHEE, and our method
101
was performed by producing H2O2 in the pELISA system instead of consuming H2O2,
102
as reported in other approaches. In the assay, the kinetic growth of AuNPs was
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controlled by an interaction between GOx and glucose as a method of regulating the
104
H2O2 concentration. Furthermore, to improve the sensitivity of the indirect
105
competitive pELISA, SiO2@PAA was introduced into the assay as a label with GOx
106
for signal amplification, which was grafted onto the second antibody (Ab2).
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Experimental section
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Reagents and materials
109
Gelatin, Na2HPO4·12H2O, NaH2PO4·2H2O, KH2PO4, NaCl, KCl, CaCl2,
110
Na2CO3, and NaHCO3 were obtained from Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co. Ltd
111
(Shanghai, China). Tween-20 was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (USA), and
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2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid (MES), HAuCl4·3H2O, N-hydroxysuccinimide
113
(NHS), N-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-N’-ethylcarbodiimide hydrochloride (EDC), GOx,
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and β-D-glucose were purchased from Aladdin (USA). Goat Anti-Rabbit IgG
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antibody was purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (USA). The polyclonal antibodies
116
against TBBPA DHEE and TBBPA MHEE were produced in our lab, and detailed
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information is provided in the Supporting Information.
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Buffers and solutions: A series of glucose concentrations was prepared by
119
diluting a stock solution in 1 mM 2-(N-morpholino) ethanesulfonic acid buffer (MES).
120
A carbonate buffer solution (CBS) composed of 1.59 g Na2CO3 and 2.94 g NaHCO3
121
was dissolved in 1.0 L pure water and stored at 4oC in a refrigerator. Blocking buffer
122
was obtained by adding 1% gelatin in the CBS solution. The washing buffer was
123
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), which contained 0.01 mol/L phosphate and 0.05%
124
Tween-20 at pH 7.4.
125
The 96-well microplates were was purchased from NUNC (Denmark). All the
126
chemicals were of analytical grade and used without further purification. The protein
127
solutions were stored at 4°C before use. A UV−vis spectrophotometer (Model:
128
UV-2600, SHIMADZU, Japan), a transmission electron microscope (TEM) (Model:
129
JEM-2100, JEOL, Japan), and a microplate reader (Model: Infinite M1000 Pro,
130
TECAN, Switzerland) were used for the analyses.
131
Method feasibility evaluation
132
In brief, different concentrations of glucose and 0.5 U/mL GOx were added into
133
the microplate with 100 µL/well and 50 µL/well, respectively. After incubating the
134
plates for 1 h at 50 °C, 50 µL freshly prepared 0.2 mM gold (III) chloride trihydrate in
135
1 mM MES buffer was mixed with the solution. When the control reactions acquired a
136
red tonality, the nanoparticle growth process was stopped by adding 50 µL 100 mM
137
glutathione to each well. The absorbance was measured using a UV−vis
138
spectrophotometer. The results are provided in the Supporting Information (Figure.
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S7).
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Immobilization of GOx on SiO2@PAA
141
SiO2@PAA was kindly provided by Professor Xiong and Xu, and the
142
nanomaterial could be synthesized according to previously reported studies22, 26, 27.
143
GOx was covalently immobilized on SiO2@PAA with an efficient “chemical
144
conjugation after electrostatic entrapment” (CCEE) method28, and the procedure was
145
described as following: 2 mg of SiO2@PAA was suspended in 1.0 mL of 50 mM MES
146
buffer (pH = 5.0) and mixed with 4 mg GOx at room temperature for 4 h. After
147
removing the excess GOx through centrifugation and washing with PBS three times,
148
the electrostatic absorption of GOx was converted into a covalent bond with the
149
addition of 0.5 mL 50 mM EDC and 0.5 mL 10 mM NHS. The conjugation was
150
allowed to proceed at room temperature for 24 h. After centrifuging the solution and
151
discarding the supernatant, the obtained SiO2@PAA@GOx conjugates were washed
152
with PBS buffer and stored in this solution at 4°C at a concentration of 1 mg/mL.
153
Preparation of SiO2@PAA@GOx@Ab2
154
The SiO2@PAA@ GOx@Ab2 complexes were prepared through the reaction of
155
the carboxyl and amide groups between Ab2 and SiO2@PAA@GOx; this reaction was
156
performed using a classical carbodiimide (EDPC) method29-32. In short, 1 mg
157
SiO2@PAA@GOx resuspended in 1 mM PBS buffer was reacted with 1 mL 50 mM
158
EDC and 1 mL 10 mM NHS under stiring overnight at room temperature. After this
159
step, Ab2 was added into the mixture, and the reaction proceeded for 24 h. Then, the
160
obtained Ab2 complex was purified using protein dialysis membranes with PBS buffer
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for 72 h and then stored in 1 mL PBS buffer at 4°C for further use.
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Development of the indirect competitive pELISA
163
The polystyrene microtiter plates were coated with coating antigen (TBBPA
164
DHEE-OVA, diluted in CBS buffer) overnight at 4°C; then, the strips were blocked
165
with blocking buffer for 2 h at 37°C after they were washed 3 times with washing
166
buffer. Afterwards, 50 µL TBBPA-DHEE antibody and 50 µL TBBPA-DHEE were
167
added into each well. Following a 30 min incubation at 37 °C, the microtiter plates
168
were washed with washing buffer to remove the unbound compounds, 100 µL 0.5
169
µg/mL SiO2@PAA@ GOx@ Ab2 was added into every well, and the reaction
170
proceeded for 30 min at 37°C. Next, with the addition of 100 µL glucose (10 mM),
171
the solution was incubated for 45 min at 50°C. After the washing step, 50 µL freshly
172
prepared 0.2 mM gold(III) chloride trihydrate in 1 mM MES buffer was mixed with
173
the solution. When the control reactions acquired a red tonality, the nanoparticle
174
growth process was stopped by adding 50 µL 100 mM glutathione to each well. The
175
absorbance at 550 nm was measured using a microplate reader. For comparison, the
176
indirect competitive ELISAs based on horseradish peroxidase (HRP) were conducted,
177
and the procedures for HRP-based ELISA are provided in the Supporting Information
178
(Figure S6).
179
Results and discussion
180
Design strategy
181
Scheme 1 depicts the assay protocol of the novel indirect two-step pELISA for
182
the simultaneous detection of TBBPA-DHEE and TBBPA-MHEE. The pELISA was
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designed based on the fact that GOx could catalyze the oxidation of glucose to
184
generate H2O2. The produced H2O2 could stimulate the growth of AuNPs with the
185
addition of AuCl4- 9, 16, as a result, the reaction solution would turn red or blue in
186
response to the amount of H2O2. Hence, the common indirect pELISA was developed
187
for determination of targets when GOx was conjugated with Ab2; however, the
188
method suffered from insufficient sensitivity in the application of trace pollutants
189
analysis. Considering that nanospherical brushes (SiO2@PAA) possess the
190
advantages26,
191
abundant carboxyl groups in its molecular structure that are beneficial for linking with
192
the amino groups of enzymes23; large surface area, which is suitable for increasing the
193
enzyme load and decreasing the affinity of competing antigens. Therefore, in the assay,
194
Ab2 was labeled with SiO2@PAA@GOx, and the H2O2 concentration was regulated
195
by the GOx amount. If the sample solution contains a low concentration of targets,
196
then after competition with coating antigens, more Ab2 conjugated with
197
SiO2@PAA@GOx would be captured by the antibodies against the targets in the
198
microplate wells, leading to more H2O2 production. Large amounts of H2O2 would
199
catalyze the HAuCl4 solution to form regular spherical AuNPs with the addition of
200
MES, and the solution would generate a red color. In contrast, a high target
201
concentration would result in a blue-colored solution because of producing irregular
202
AuNPs.
203
Conjugation and characterization of SiO2@PAA@GOx
204
28, 33
, such as good biocompatibility, which was attributed to the
In the assay, the conjugation of SiO2@PAA and GOx was considered as an
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important step for signal amplification, and several experimental factors that could
206
affect the conjugation performance were investigated in detail, including the pH of the
207
buffer and EDC, NHS, and GOx concentrations. Meanwhile, the capacity and activity
208
of the immobilized GOx were identified as important parameters to evaluate this
209
relationship.
210
SiO2@PAA modification by GOx was accomplished using CCEE28, and the first
211
step of the approach could be achieved by adjusting the buffer pH value to that of the
212
isoelectric point of the protein. In the present study, MES buffers with varied pH
213
values were tested to obtain the optimum conditions, as shown in Figure 1A. The
214
capacity of immobilized GOx increased substantially to the maximum value when the
215
pH reached 5; then, a decreasing tendency was observed when the pH exceeded 5,
216
which was in agreement with the isoelectric point of GOx (pH = 4.9). Hence, the
217
MES buffer at pH 5 was selected for this reaction system. The next step was to
218
achieve a strong bond between the enzyme and the nanosilica spheres via the amino
219
groups on the surface of GOx and the carboxyl groups of the SiO2@PAA by the active
220
ester method. Figure 1C and Figure 1B indicate that the capacity of immobilized
221
GOx reached its maximum when the EDC and NHS concentrations were 50 mM and
222
10 mM, respectively. Furthermore, during the enzyme coupling process, the addition
223
of NHS had no obvious side effects on the enzyme activity. In addition, when the
224
GOx concentration was 4 mg/ml, the best capacity and activity of immobilized GOx
225
were achieved (Figure 1D).
226
A series of further verifications were performed for SiO2@PAA@GOx, and its
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catalytic properties were evaluated. The TEM image shows that SiO2@PAA was
228
monodispersed with a core-shell structure (Figure 2D), and successful immobilization
229
of GOx on SiO2@PAA can be intuitively observed in Figure 2A (the solution of e
230
turned from light yellow to colorless after centrifugation compared with the color in a
231
and c ). In addition, the UV-visible absorption spectra in Figure 2C provides powerful
232
evidence for our results; the characteristic absorption of SiO2@PAA@GOx was 449
233
nm, which was different from that of free GOx and SiO2@PAA but similar to that
234
previously reported34. To investigate the potential effects on the catalytic performance
235
after the covalent conjugation between GOx and SiO2@PAA was achieved, the
236
solutions (containing HAuCl4 and glucose) were visually evaluated in the presence or
237
absence of our synthesized SiO2@PAA@GOx. Figure 2B indicates that the color
238
changed only for the solutions in the presence of SiO2@PAA@GOx and a decrease in
239
the SiO2@PAA@GOx concentration (diluted gradually) caused the colored solution
240
to turn from red to blue, which implied that SiO2@PAA@GOx had sufficient catalytic
241
ability and could be used in the following pELISA.
242
Optimization of the indirect competitive pELISA
243
In this assay, the H2O2 concentration was considered as the key factor influencing
244
the pELISA performance, which was related to several factors, including the glucose
245
concentration, the concentration of SiO2@PAA@GOx-labeled Ab2 and the reaction
246
time between glucose and the labeled Ab2. To control the amount of produced H2O2,
247
these three parameters were optimized.
248
Glucose was used as a type of reaction substrate to control the production rate
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and yield of H2O2; as shown in Figure 3A, the solutions with 0.1 mmol and 1 mmol
250
H2O2 displayed a blue and light red color, respectively, indicating that the production
251
of H2O2 is too low to meet our requirements. By comparison, the 10 mmol glucose
252
solution displayed a pure red color, and there was a clear distinction between the red
253
and blue colors, which was suitable for our pELISA. The concentration of
254
SiO2@PAA@GOx-labeled Ab2 was the second element affecting the quantity of
255
produced H2O2. Figure 3B shows that more sensitivity was observed when the
256
concentration of SiO2@PAA@GOx was 0.5 µg/mL. Theoretically, when the reaction
257
is allowed to proceed for a longer period, more H2O2 is generated, and accordingly,
258
the solution turns dark red. Considering the colors and the detection limit of this
259
method, we selected 45 min as a suitable reaction time (see Figure 3C).
260
Under the above-mentioned optimized conditions (glucose, 10 mmol;
261
SiO2@PAA@GOx-labeled Ab2, 0.5 µg/mL; reaction time, 45 min), the sensitivity of
262
the proposed approach was estimated by the naked eye and the microplate reader via
263
measurement of serial TBBPA-DHEE concentrations. As shown in Figure 4A,
264
obvious color changes were observed after different target concentrations were added
265
(from 10-4 µg/L to 103 µg/L), and these color changes could be clearly discriminated
266
visually at the TBBPA-DHEE concentration of 10-3 µg/L to 103 µg/L. In addition, the
267
sensitivity
268
concentration-dependent absorbance changes of the analytes. Figure 4B reveals that
269
there was a good linear relationship with the concentration of analytes from 10-3 µg/L
270
to 10 µg/L, and the regression equation for TBBPA-DHEE was y = 0.37532-0.02536
was
measured
by
a
microplate
reader
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to
the
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Lg(x) with a good correlation coefficient (R2 = 0.98914). The LOD was calculated
272
(based on a signal/noise ratio (S/N) of 3) as 3.3×10-4 µg/L, which was 3 orders of
273
magnitude lower than that of the conventional indirect competitive ELISA (0.7018
274
µg/L) using the same antibody.
275
Assay validation and measurement of real samples
276
The accuracy and precision of the proposed pELISA were evaluated using a
277
spike-recovery analysis for water samples from three sources fortified with different
278
concentrations of targets. Satisfactory recoveries (78.0% - 102.79%) were obtained
279
after sample analysis with four replicates, and the intra-assay coefficient of variation
280
(CV) ranged from 4.38% to 9.87%.
281
To further investigate the reliability of the established method, it was applied to
282
measure real samples along with conventional ELISA. Table 2 indicates that the
283
results using both methods were in good agreement at a high level for targets.
284
Meanwhile, our pELISA showed a higher sensitivity, and ELISA could not meet the
285
requirement for the determination of trace analytes.
286
In the present study, an improved indirect competitive pELISA was developed
287
for the ultrasensitive simultaneous detection of TBBPA-MHEE and TBBPA-DHEE
288
using our produced antibody, and SiO2@PAA served as a GOx container for signal
289
amplification. Under the optimized conditions, the LOD of the proposed method
290
reached 10-3 µg/L using the naked eye and 3.3×10-4 µg/L using a microplate reader.
291
Due to the satisfactory accuracy and precision of the established approach (recoveries
292
of 78.0% - 102.79%; CV values of 4.38% - 9.87%), it was applied for the analysis of
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real samples along with conventional ELISA, and the results of the two methods were
294
agreed well. Therefore, the method has a great potential for application to the
295
determination of trace pollutants in environmental and food samples.
296
Acknowledgements
297
The present work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of
298
China (Grants 21577051, 41601552), the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu
299
Province (BK20140543), and the Jiangsu Collaborative Innovation Center of
300
Technology and Material of Water Treatment. In addition, we appreciate the professor
301
Yonghua Xiong in Nanchang University and professor Hong Xu in Shanghai Jiao
302
Tong University for giving us SiO2@PAA, and professor Xiong also provided some
303
assistances for us in the synthesis of SiO2@PAA.
304
Supporting Information Available
305
Additional information as noted in text. This material is available free of charge
306
via the Internet at htpp://pubs.acs.org.
307
Notes
308
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
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References
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tetrabromobisphenol-S and tetrabromobisphenol-A derivative flame retardants in
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electrochemical immunosensor based on horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-loaded
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TABLES Table 1. The recovery of the indirect competitive pELISA (n=4)
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Background
Added
Found
Recovery
CV
(µg/L)
(µg/L)
(µg/L)
(%)
(%)
0.0100
0.0091
91.00
8.22
0.0500
0.0416
83.20
5.13
0.5000
0.4332
86.64
5.99
5.0000
5.1396
102.79
4.38
0.0100
0.0083
83.00
7.56
0.0500
0.0391
78.20
9.87
0.5000
0.4011
80.22
7.19
5.0000
4.8226
96.45
6.01
0.0100
0.0101
101.0
7.99
0.0500
0.0392
78.40
8.91
0.5000
0.4117
82.34
8.72
5.0000
4.7819
95.64
7.24
Sample
Pure Water
Tap Water
River water
ND
ND
ND
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ND: Not be detected; CV, intra-assay coefficient of variation obtained from 4 determinations
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performed in the same plate.
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Table 2. The Detection of real water samples in Suzhou (n=4) Samples
ELISA (µg/L)
Our Work (µg/L)
S1
ND
ND
S2
ND
0.32
S3
ND
ND
S4
7.7
6.9
S5
7.2
6.9
S6
2.6
3.0
S7
1.7
1.8
S8
1.5
1.4
S9
ND
0.091
S10
ND
ND
S11
ND
ND
S12
ND
0.11
ND: Not be detected
435 436 437 438 439 440 441 442 443 444
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SCHEMES
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Scheme 1. Schematic illustration of indirect competitive pELISA(Ab1: primary
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antibody;
Ab2: secondary antibody)
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FIGURE CAPTIONS
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Figure 1. The optimization of conjugation parameters (A. The pH of buffer; B. The
452
concentration of EDC; C. The concentration of NHS; D. The concentration of GOx).
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Figure 2. The characterization of synthetic compounds (A. Images of aqueous
454
suspensions of SiO2@PAA before and after immobilizing with GOx, (a): free GOx, (b)
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and (c): dispersed SiO2@PAA and SiO2@PAA@GOx, (d) and (e): centrifugated
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SiO2@PAA
457
SiO2@PAA@GOx, (a): not add in, (b): add in; C. The UV/vis spectra of aqueous
458
suspensions of free GOx, SiO2@PAA and SiO2@PAA@GOx; D. The TEM image of
459
SiO2@PAA).
460
Figure 3. The parameter optimization of indirect competitive pELISA (A. The
461
concentration of glucose; B. The concentration of SiO2@PAA@GOx@Ab2; C. The
462
time for the reaction between GOx and glucose).
463
Figure 4. Indirect competitive pELISA dectection for TBBPA-DHEE (A. Naked-eye
464
detection of TBBPA-DHEE; B. Calibration curves toward TBBPA-DHEE).
and
SiO2@PAA@GOx;
B.
Validation
465
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the
catalysis
of
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Figure 1. The optimization of conjugation parameters (A. The pH of buffer; B. The
468
concentration of EDC; C. The concentration of NHS; D. The concentration of GOx).
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Figure 2. The characterization of synthetic compounds (A. Images of aqueous
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suspensions of SiO2@PAA before and after immobilizing with GOx, (a): free GOx, (b)
473
and (c): dispersed SiO2@PAA and SiO2@PAA@GOx, (d) and (e): centrifugated
474
SiO2@PAA
475
SiO2@PAA@GOx, (a): not add in, (b): add in; C. The UV/vis spectra of aqueous
476
suspensions of free GOx, SiO2@PAA and SiO2@PAA@GOx; D. The TEM image of
477
SiO2@PAA).
and
SiO2@PAA@GOx;
B.
Validation
478
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the
catalysis
of
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Figure 3. The parameter optimization of indirect competitive pELISA (A. The
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concentration of glucose; B. The concentration of SiO2@PAA@GOx@Ab2; C. The
482
time for the reaction between GOx and glucose).
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Figure 4. Indirect competitive pELISA dectection for TBBPA-DHEE (A. Naked-eye
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detection of TBBPA-DHEE; B. Calibration curves toward TBBPA-DHEE). Each
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point represents the mean values ± standard deviation for three replicates.
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For TOC only
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