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Patterned Photonic Nitrocellulose for Pseudo-Paper ELISA Junjie Chi, Bingbing Gao, Mi Sun, Fengling Zhang, Enben Su, Hong Liu, and Zhongze Gu Anal. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b01732 • Publication Date (Web): 16 Jun 2017 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on June 19, 2017
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Analytical Chemistry
[Prepared for publication as an Article in Analytical Chemistry]
2 3
Ms. ID:
4 5 6
Patterned Photonic Nitrocellulose for Pseudo-Paper ELISA
7 8
Junjie Chi, † Bingbing Gao, † Mi Sun, † Fengling Zhang, † Enben Su#,
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Hong Liu,*,†,‡ and Zhongze Gu*,†,‡
10 11
† State Key Laboratory of Bioelectronics, School of Biological
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Science and Medical Engineering, Southeast University, Nanjing
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210096, China
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‡ Laboratory of Environment and Biosafety, Research Institute of
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Southeast University in Suzhou, Suzhou 215123, China
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# Getein Biotech, Inc. No.9 Bofu Road, Luhe Distric, Nanjing,
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Jiangsu, China (211505)
18 19
*To whom correspondence should be addressed.
20
Email:
[email protected],
[email protected] 21
Submitted: June 15, 2017
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Abstract
2
We report an enzyme-link immunosorbent assay (ELISA) based on
3
patterned pseudo-paper that is made of photonic nitrocellulose
4
for highly sensitive fluorescent bioanalysis. The pseudo-paper is
5
fabricated using self-assembled monodisperse SiO2 nanoparticles
6
that are patterned on a polypropylene substrate as template. The
7
self-assembled nanoparticles have a close-packed hexagonal (opal)
8
structure, so the resulting nitrocellulose has a complementary
9
(inverse opal) photonic structure. Owing to the slow-photon
10
effect of the photonic structure, fluorescent emission for ELISA
11
is enhanced by up to 57-fold without increasing the assay time or
12
complexity. As the detection signal is significantly amplified, a
13
simple smartphone camera suffices to serve as the detector for
14
rapid and on-site analysis. As a demonstration, human IgG is
15
quantitatively analysed with a detection limit of 3.8 fg/mL that
16
is lower than that of conventional ELISA and paper-based ELISA.
17
The consumption of sample and reagent is also reduced by 33-times
18
compared with conventional ELISA. Therefore, the pseudo-paper
19
ELISA based on patterned photonic nitrocellulose is promising for
20
sensitive, high-throughput bioanalysis.
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Analytical Chemistry
1
Introduction
2
Enzyme-link immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was introduced by
3
Perlmann and Engvall in 1971. In a typical sandwich ELISA, a
4
solid substrate is functionalized with capture antibody, which
5
binds to its target antigen in an aqueous sample. An additional
6
enzyme-linked tracing antibody is then added to bind to the
7
antigen forming a sandwich structure, and the enzyme amplifies
8
the detection signal by a catalytic reaction. Combining the high
9
specificity of the antibody-antigen binding and the high-turnover
1
2
10
catalytic reaction of the enzyme, ELISA has been proven to be a
11
powerful bioanalytical tool for a wide range of biochemical
12
applications.
13
2, 3
Conventional ELISA typically involves enzyme substrates that 4,
14
produce observable signals to indicate the presence of analyte.
15
5
16
plate fabricated by injection molding of polystyrene (PS). The
17
whole assay process can be fully automated to accomplish high-
18
throughput testing. However, it usually requires large amount of
19
sample and reagents (~ 20-200 µL).6 The heterogeneous assay also
20
involves long-time reaction steps (~ 1 h) because reagents in the
21
bulk solution have to diffuse over a long distance to react with
22
the immobilized substance on the surface.6 The detection limit is
23
still not low enough for some important diagnostic biomarkers
24
even using sophisticated and expensive instruments,7-11 although
25
various detection methods have been developed to improve the
26
sensitivity, such as chemiluminescent,12 electrochemical,13 Raman,14
27
plasmonic,15 and fluorescent methods.16
The whole ELISA is usually carried out in a standard 96-well
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Other than plastic materials, cellulose-based materials have
2
also been used for immunoassays for a long time. For example,
3
dot-immunobinding assays using filter paper and lateral-flow
4
immunochromatographic assays using nitrocellulose paper have been
5
available for decades.
6
renewable and biodegradable cellulose-based materials are
7
relatively more environmental friendly, and they provide more
8
biocompatible surface for maintaining the activity of biological
9
reagents such as antibodies and enzymes.
17, 18
Compared with plastic materials, the
19
Recently, there has
10
been considerable interest in using patterned paper as the
11
substrate for ELISA owing to several significant advantages.20,
12
The fabrication of patterned paper that mimics the standard 96-
13
well plate can be accomplished simply by printing which is
14
scaleable and may enable cost-effective production. The ELISA
15
based on patterned paper requires smaller amount of reagents and
16
sample owing to the small volume of the paper reservoir. The
17
reduced volume leads to short distance that reagents have to
18
diffuse to react with immobilized substance, so the assay time
19
can be remarkably shortened.22 However, compared with conventional
20
PS-based ELISA, the most crucial drawback of paper ELISA is the
21
low sensitivity owing to small volume of the paper reservoir.
22
Usually, the sensitivity of paper-based ELISA is lower than
23
conventional ELISA by approximately an order of magnitude.22 What
24
makes it worse is that the reproducibility of paper-based ELISA
25
is usually worse than PS-based ELISA leading to higher detection
26
limit. Therefore, development of paper-based ELISA with high
27
detection sensitivity is highly of importance. 4 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Analytical Chemistry
We have previously reported the fabrication of patterned
2
photonic nitrocellulose for pseudo-paper microfluidics. The
3
photonic structure of the patterned nitrocellulose resulted in
4
several highly-wanted characteristics for microfluidic
5
bioanalysis.
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nitrocellulose for high-throughput pseudo-paper ELISA (Figure 1).
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The fabrication of the patterned photonic nitrocellulose is based
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on self-assembly techniques. What differentiates the
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nitrocellulose pseudo-paper from conventional nitrocellulose
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Here, we report the use of the patterned photonic
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paper is that the interconnected pores of the pseudo-paper are
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highly ordered. The periodic structure of the material magnifies
12
the interaction of light with fluorophores leading to amplified
13
fluorescent emission.
14
enhancement effect of the photonic nitrocellulose, and its
15
application to highly sensitive fluorescent ELISA of a biomarker.
We investigated the fluorescent-
16 17
Experimental Section
18
Chemicals and materials. Nitrocellulose was obtained from
19
Sinopharm Chemical Reagent Co., Ltd (Shanghai, China). TWEEN-20,
20
acetone, dimethylformamid (DMF), ethylene alcohol, bovine serum
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albumin (BSA), horseradish peroxidase (HRP), H2O2 and HF were
22
purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. Polypropylene (PP) film (PP2910,
23
100 µm thick, 210 mm × 297 mm) was obtained from 3M Company (St.
24
Paul, MN). Monodisperse SiO2 nanoparticles with a diameter of
25
247, 302, 323, and 340 nm respectively were synthesized using the
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Stöber-Fink-Bohn method.24 Rabbit anti-human IgG, human IgG, HRP-
27
labelled mouse anti-human IgG and FITC-labelled goat anti-human 5 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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IgG were all purchased from Santa Cruz Biotechnology Co., Ltd
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(Shanghai, China). 10-Acetyl-3,7-dihydroxyphenoxazine (ADHP) was
3
purchased from AAT Bioquest, Inc (Sunnyvale, US). 0.10 M PBS (pH
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7.4) containing 0.20% TWEEN-20 (PBST) was used for wash. All
5
solutions were prepared with deionised water (18.0 M• cm, Milli-Q
6
Gradient System, Millipore) with ultraviolet sterilization. All
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reagents were used as received without further purification.
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Experimental Procedures. The fabrication of the patterned photonic nitrocellulose was based on the procedure we have 23
10
previously reported with some modification.
11
treated in a plasma cleaner (DT-01, Opsplasma, China) to increase
12
its surface hydrophilicity (5 min, 100 w). Next, a toner pattern
13
with the format of standard 96-well plate was printed on the PP
14
substrate using an office laser printer (CP105b, Fuji Xerox). A
15
0.50 µL aliquot of aqueous solution containing 20% (w/v)
16
monodisperse SiO2 nanoparticles, 13% (v/v) ethylene alcohol and
17
0.050% TWEEN-20 was dropcast onto each well.
18
hydrophobicity of toner printed on the substrate, the solution
19
was restricted in the hydrophilic well surrounded by the printed
20
toner. After complete drying at a room temperature of 25 oC, the
21
colloid crystal of SiO2 nanoparticles formed in the well.
22
To obtain the photonic nitrocellulose which has the
First, PP film was
Due to the
23
structures complementary to the colloid crystal, an acetone and
24
DMF (1:1 v/v) solution containing 7.5% (w/v) nitrocellulose was
25
dropcast onto the PP film to form a layer of nitrocellulose on
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the PP film. After baking at 60 oC for 6 h, the nitrocellulose
27
layer containing SiO2 nanoparticles was torn off from the PP 6 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Analytical Chemistry
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film. Then the SiO2 nanoparticles remaining on the nitrocellulose
2
layer were etched using an aqueous solution containing 4.0% HF.
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Finally, the nitrocellulose membrane was thoroughly washed with
4
deionised water and then dried to obtain the photonic
5
nitrocellulose for pseudo-paper ELISA. For control experiment,
6
the nitrocellulose solution was directly dropcast onto the PP
7
substrate without the SiO2 colloid crystal template resulting in a
8
random-structured nitrocellulose membrane. The reflection spectra
9
of these materials were obtained using an optical-fibre
10
spectrometer (QE 65000, Ocean Optics). Scanning electron
11
microscopy (SEM, Hitachi S-3000N, Japan) was used to obtain the
12
electronic micrographs of these materials.
13
To prepare the substrate for pseudo-paper ELISA, a 3.0 µL
14
aliquot of 100 µg/mL rabbit anti-human IgG (capture antibody) was
15
dropcast onto each photonic nitrocellulose well. After incubating
16
in an enclosed chamber at a room temperature of 25 oC for 30
17
minutes, the substrate was washed for 3 times by dropcast 0.10 M
18
PBST solution (pH 7.4) containing 0.20% TWEEN-20 on the reservoir
19
with gentle shaking to remove the free antibody. Next, a 3.0 µL
20
aliquot of 0.10 M PBS solution (pH 7.4) containing 1.0% BSA was
21
dropcast onto each well for blocking the remaining active spots.
22
A 3.0 µL aliquot of testing sample containing human IgG was
23
dropcast onto each well. After incubation in an enclosed chamber
24
at a room temperature of 25 oC for 30 minutes, the substrate was
25
washed for 3 times with 0.10 M PBST solution (pH 7.4) containing
26
0.20% TWEEN-20. The excess wash buffer was removed using a piece
27
of blotting paper. A 3.0 µL aliquot of 20 µg/mL HRP-labelled 7 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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mouse anti-human IgG was added. The incubation and wash procedure
2
were the same as mentioned above. Finally, a 3.0 µL aliquot of
3
100 µM fluorogenic solution containing ADHP and H2O2 was dropcast
4
onto the well. After incubation in a dark chamber at 37 C for 30
5
minutes, the fluorescence intensity was measured using a
6
fluorospectro photometer (F-7000, Hitachi). A fluorescent
7
microscope (BX53, Olympus) was used to obtain the fluorescent
8
image of the detection zone.
9
o
A home-made apparatus for smartphone-based fluorescent
10
detection was designed using 3D MAX software and fabricated using
11
a three-dimensional printer (Maker Bot Replicator) and polylatic
12
acid (PLA) as the printing material. The apparatus consisted of a
13
green LED (Edmund Optics, USA) as the light source, 530±10 nm
14
bandpass filter for the light source and 585 nm longpass filter
15
(Giai photonics Co. Ltd., China) for the smartphone camera.
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Analytical Chemistry
1 2
Results and Discussion
3
Paper is a cellulose-based material that is used as the substrate
4
for a range of chemical analysis such as pH test, iodine-starch
5
test, urine dipstick test, chromatography and lateral-flow assays.
6
In this work, we used nitrocellulose, which is a cellulose
7
derivative, as a starting material to fabricate the substrate for
8
ELISA. We first printed toner on a hydrophilic PP substrate so
9
that an 8×12 array of reservoirs was patterned. Then the photonic
10
nitrocellulose was prepared in each reservoir based on self-
11
assembly technique.
12
The obtained photonic 96-well ELISA substrate was shown in
13
Figure 2a (I). The nitrocellulose formed a green colored layer in
14
the reservoir with only a hole in the central probably owing to
15
coffee-ring effect, as shown in Figure 2a (II). The green color
16
of the nitrocellulose reservoir was because of the Bragg
17
scattering effect of the periodic nanostructure of the material
18
leading to a photonic stopband. Since the nitrocellulose layer
19
was more hydrophilic than the surrounding toner layer, aqueous
20
sample was confined in the reservoir without leaking during the
21
ELISA process. After completion of ELISA, the generated
22
fluorescent species can enter the nanopores of the nitrocellulose
23
which caused color change of the photonic crystals (PCs) (Figure
24
2a (III)). By attaching the nitrocellulose substrate to a plastic
25
backing substrate, the fabricated photonic pseudo-paper can
26
replace the conventional 96-well plate to be used in a
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commercially available ELISA processor for automated high-
2
throughput testing (Figure 2b (I and II)).
3
PCs have been widely demonstrated to be an effective and
4
efficient method to amplify fluorescent emission based the slow-
5
photon effect.
6
small near the edge of the photonic stopband. Under the
7
circumstance, photons can couple with a local resonance and Bragg
8
scattering, which greatly enhances the interaction of light with
9
substrate. In addition, the high density of states near the
25
The group velocity of light becomes abnormally
10
photonic stopband enhances the coupling of spontaneously emitted
11
photons to these mode.26,
12
enhanced at the band edge but suppressed inside the gap.
13
The stopband of
27
Thus fluorescence can be significantly
photonic material can be tuned over a wide
14
range for different fluorophores by changing the crystal
15
structure, the refractive indices of the material and the
16
dimensions of the structure.28 For the photonic nitrocellulose
17
which has the inverse-opal structure, the stopband is mainly
18
governed by the diameter of the colloidal spheres used to
19
fabricate the structure according to the Bragg equation,
20
λ=1.633×dnavg., where d is the center-to-center distance between
21
neighboring particles, and navg. is the average refractive index of
22
the material.29
23
To study the fluorescence enhancement property of the
24
photonic nitrocellulose with different stopbands, we fabricated
25
different photonic nitrocellulose reservoirs by changing the
26
diameter of the SiO2 nanoparticle template (i.e. 247, 302, 323
27
and 340 nm). Figure 3a showed the SEM images of the SiO2 colloid 10 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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Analytical Chemistry
1
crystal templates having close-packed hexagonal structures and
2
the corresponding photonic nitrocellulose fabricated using these
3
templates. Note that the nanopores of the top layer were
4
interconnected with those of the underlying layers so that the
5
solutes can diffuse into the photonic nitrocellulose layer. For
6
control experiments, a nitrocellulose membrane fabricated with no
7
template was also fabricated, which had a random porous structure.
8 9
The photonic nitrocellulose reservoirs showed different colors (Figure 3b). The colors (V-VIII) were from the highly
10
ordered structures of the nitrocellulose reservoirs which
11
resulted in photonic band gaps. With the band gap, photons with
12
specific wavelength cannot pass through the material and are
13
reflected, shown in Figure 3c. Half-peak width of the reflection
14
spectra indicates the degree of order of the nanostructure, which
15
had significant influence on the light propagation and
16
interaction with fluorescent molecules.30 Compared with photonic
17
nitrocellulose we fabricated, the random-structured
18
nitrocellulose showed broad reflection from 350 to 700 nm owing
19
to diffuse reflection of the surface.
20
The maximum excitation and emission wavelengths (λex and λem)
21
for the AHOP generated from ADHP oxidation, were 571 nm and 585
22
nm, respectively, which was shown in Figure 3c. To evaluate the
23
effect of the stopband wavelengths on the fluorescent intensity,
24
we dropcast the same amount (3.0 µL) of solution containing 100
25
µM fluorogenic substrate (ADHP), 100 µM H2O2 and 1 ng/mL HRP-
26
labelled mouse anti-human IgG into each pseudo-paper reservoir
27
and allow them to react at 37 oC in a dark place for 30 minutes. 11 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
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1
Figure 4 showed fluorescence intensities of AHOP on different
2
substrates. The fluorescent intensity obtained from each of the
3
photonic pseudo-paper was obviously higher than that of random-
4
structured nitrocellulose. Furthermore, the photonic
5
nitrocellulose with the stopbands slightly away from the λex and
6
λem (i.e. 435 nm, 545 nm and 600 nm) lead to significant
7
enhancement of fluorescnece. The greatest enhancement (about 57-
8
fold) was observed for photonic nitrocellulose with a stopband of
9
545 nm, which was used for further ELISA experiments. For the
10
photonic nitrocellulose with the stopband (585 nm) overlapped
11
with both the λex and λem, the fluorescent enhancement was
12
suppressed as we have previously discussed.
13
For the fluorescent ELISA, capture antibody for human IgG
14
was immobilized on the photonic nitrocellulose, and the
15
nitrocellulose was then blocked by BSA. The SEM of the
16
nitrocellulose before and after antibody immobilization was shown
17
in Figure 5a. A layer of protein was observed after
18
immobilization of antibody. The adsorbed protein might result in
19
the shift of the stopband of the nitrocellulose because of it
20
changes the refractive index in the nanopores. Therefore, the
21
reflectance spectra of the photonic nitrocellulose before and
22
after antibody immobilization were obtained and shown in Figure
23
5b. There was just several nanometers’ red-shift of the stopband
24
after antibody immobilization, so its’ influence on assay results
25
was negligible.
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Analytical Chemistry
1
We carried out an ELISA for the detection of human IgG on
2
the prepared photonic pseudo-paper. As shown in Figure 6, the
3
fluorescent intensity measured from the detection reservoir
4
increased with increasing concentration of human IgG. A linear
5
correlation between the fluorescent intensity and the logarithm
6
of the human IgG concentration was obtained from 1×10-2 to 1×103
7
pg/mL. The limit of detection (LOD), calculated as 3 times the
8
standard deviation of the testing results of the blank divided by
9
the slope of the calibration curve, is 3.8 fg/mL (2.5×10-2 fM),
10
which is significantly lower than commercial ELISA and paper-
11
based ELISA (Table 1). Moreover, owing to the small volume of the
12
detection reservoir, the consumption of sample and reagents was
13
remarkably reduced to 3.0 µL, which may enable lower cost tests.
14
Since the fluorescent intensity was significantly enhanced
15
using the photonic pseudo-paper as the substrate, a smartphone
16
camera suffices to detect the fluorescent signal. A home-made
17
device was designed to carry out the on-site detection. The
18
device was comprised of a LED as the light source and two filters
19
for excitation and emission, respectively. The smartphone was
20
equipped with a normal CMOS camera with 13 megapixel resolution
21
to acquire images (Figure 7a). A smartphone App was programmed to
22
recognize the detection reservoir, and then analyze the RGB value
23
for determination of the concentration of IgG in the sample
24
(Figure 7b). This portable and cost-effective mobile detector
25
could be useful for inexpensive, point-of-care testing under
26
resource-limited conditions.
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1 2
Summary and Conclusions
3
In summary, we have reported the patterned pseudo-paper for
4
carrying out ELISA with high sensitivity and low consumption of
5
sample and reagents. The stopband and fluorescent enhancement
6
properties of the photonic nitrocellulose pseudo-paper with
7
different pore diameters were investigated. Due to the slow-
8
photon effects of the photonic nitrocellulose that enhanced the
9
interaction of the photons with the fluorophore, the fluorescent
10
emission was amplified by up to 57-fold in comparison with
11
random-structured nitrocellulose. Using the material as the ELISA
12
substrate, human IgG was quantitatively detected with a LOD of
13
3.8 fg/mL. A smartphone-based system was also designed for
14
inexpensive, on-site detection. Therefore, the pseudo-paper ELISA
15
is sensitive, fast, cost-effective, and environmental friendly
16
than conventional ELISA based on plastic 96-well plate. We
17
believe it is promising for quantitative bioanalysis.
18 19
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Analytical Chemistry
1 2
Acknowledgments
3
We
4
Recruitment
5
Entrepreneurial Talent Recruitment Program of Jiangsu Province,
6
the
7
21327902, 21635001), the Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu
8
(BK20140619), the Science and Technology Development Program of
9
Suzhou (ZXY201439), the Research Fund for the Doctoral Program of
10
Higher Education of China (20120092130006), State Key Project of
11
Research
12
Special
13
Scientific and Technological Achievements (BA2015067).
gratefully
National
and Funds
acknowledge
Program
Natural
of
Global
Science
Development of
financial
Jiangsu
support
Experts,
Foundation
of
(2016YFF0100802). Province
for
the
14 15
15 ACS Paragon Plus Environment
from
Chinese
Innovative
China
The
and
(21405014,
Project
of
Transformation
of
Analytical Chemistry
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1 2 3 4
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Determination of food authenticity by enzyme-linked
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immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Food Control 2008, 19, 1-8.
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2. Engvall, E.; Perlmann, P., Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
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(ELISA) quantitative assay of immunoglobulin G.
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Immunochemistry 1971, 8, 871-874.
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3. Van Weemen, B.; Schuurs, A., Immunoassay using antigen—enzyme conjugates. FEBS Lett. 1971, 15, 232-236.
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4. Jiang, W.; Beier, R. C.; Luo, P.; Zhai, P.; Wu, N.; Lin, G.;
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1 2 3
Figure Captions Figure 1. Schematic illustration showing the photonic pseudo-
4
paper and fluorescent ELISA carried out on the substrate.
5 6
Figure 2. a) A photograph of the photonic pseudo-paper with the
7
format of a standard 96-well plate fabricated using SiO2 colloid
8
crystal (diameter: 302 nm) as the template (I). Scale bar: 1 cm.
9
A photograph of a detection reservoir before (II) and after (III)
10
completion of the ELISA process. Scale bar: 1 mm. b) A
11
conventional plastic 96-well plate for automated ELISA (I). A
12
photonic pseudo-paper attached on a flat substrate for automated
13
ELISA with fluorescent enhancement (II). Scale bar: 5 cm.
14 15
Figure 3. a) Scanning electron micrographs of the SiO2 template
16
used to fabricate the photonic nitrocellulose (from I to IV), the
17
corresponding as-prepared photonic nitrocellulose (from V to
18
VIII) and the randomly-structured nitrocellulose membrane
19
fabricated by directly dropcasting nitrocellulose solution onto
20
the PP film and allowing it to dry (IX). The SiO2 template were
21
fabricated by self-assembly of monodisperse SiO2 colloid with a
22
diameter of 247 nm, 302 nm, 323 nm and 340 nm, respectively.
23
Scale bar: 500 nm. b) Optical photographs of the photonic
24
nitrocellulose ELISA reservoir. Scale bar: 1 mm. c) Reflectance
25
spectra of the nitrocellulose substrates. The excitation and
26
emission spectra of AHOP are indicated using dashed lines. The
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1
reflection peak was 435 nm (V), 545 nm (VI), 585 nm (VII) and 600
2
nm (VIII), respectively.
3 4
Figure 4. a) Fluorescent spectra of the AHOP on the
5
nitrocellulose substrates. b) The maximum fluorescent intensity
6
as a function of the nitrocellulose structures. The error bars
7
represent standard deviation for three replicated measurements.
8 9
Figure 5. a) Scanning electron micrographs of the photonic
10
nitrocellulose fabricated for ELISA before (I) and after (II) the
11
immobilization of capture antibody and BSA blocking. Scale bar:
12
500 nm. b) Reflectance spectra of the nitrocellulose substrate
13
before (VI) and after (VI’) the antibody and BSA modification.
14 15
Figure 6. a) Fluorescence intensity measured after completion of
16
the ELISA as a function of the concentration of human IgG in the
17
sample. b) The fluorescence intensity as a function of the
18
logarithm of the IgG concentration. The error bars represent
19
standard deviation for three replicated measurements. Inset:
20
fluorescent micrographs obtained for the ELISA. Scale bar: 1 mm.
21 22
Figure 7. Smartphone-based device for fluorescent detection. a)
23
photographs of the device. Scale bar: 1 cm. b) The screenshots of
24
the smartphone showing the detection App.
25 26
Table 1.
27
conventaionl cellulose and PS.22,
Comparison between ELISAs using the pseudo-paper, 31
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Analytical Chemistry
Figures
2 3
Figure 1 / Chi et al.
4
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1
2 3 4
Figure 2 / Chi et al.
5 6
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Figure 3 / Chi et al.
4 5 6
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1 2
Figure 4 / Chi et al.
3
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Figure 5 / Chi et al.
3
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Figure 6 / Chi et al.
3
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Figure 7 / Chi et al.
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1 Photonic NC-based
Paper-based
Conventional
ELISA
ELISA
ELISA
LOD
2.5×10 fM
54 fM
1.07 pM
Samples and reagents
Volume (µL)
Volume (µL)
Volume (µL)
1)Capture antibody
3.0
3.0
100
2)Blocking
3.0
3.0
100
3)Samples
3.0
3.0
50
4)Second antibody
3.0
3.0
100
5)Enzyme substrates
3.0
3.0
150
Total
15
15
500
-2
immobilization
2 3
Table 1 / Chi et al.
4 5
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TOC Graphic
3
4 5
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