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Rapid and automated detection of six contaminants in milk using a centrifugal microfluidic platform with two rotation axes Yiqi Chen, Yunzeng Zhu, Minjie Shen, Ying Lu, Jing Cheng, and Youchun Xu Anal. Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b01998 • Publication Date (Web): 24 May 2019 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on May 25, 2019

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Analytical Chemistry

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Rapid and automated detection of six contaminants in

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milk using a centrifugal microfluidic platform with two

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rotation axes

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Yiqi Chen,†,‡ Yunzeng Zhu,†,‡ Minjie Shen, †,‡ Ying Lu†, Jing Cheng, †,‡,§ and Youchun Xu *,†,‡,§

6 7



8 9



State Key Laboratory of Membrane Biology, Department of Biomedical Engineering, School of

Medicine, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China. Collaborative Innovation Center for Diagnosis and Treatment of Infectious Diseases, Hangzhou

310003, China.

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§ National

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*Corresponding

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E-mail address: [email protected] (Y. Xu).

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ABSTRACT: Antibiotic residues and illegal additives are among the most common contaminants in milk and

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other dairy products, and they have become essential public health concerns. To ensure the safety of milk,

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rapid and convenient screening methods are highly desired. Here, we integrated microarray technology into a

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microfluidic device to achieve rapid, sensitive and fully automated detection of chloramphenicol, tetracyclines,

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enrofloxacin, cephalexin, sulfonamides and melamine in milk on a centrifugal microfluidic platform with two

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rotation axes. All the liquid reagent for immunoassay were pre-stored in the reagent chambers of the

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microdevice and can be released on demand. The whole detection can be automatically accomplished within

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17 min, and the limits of detection were defined as 0.92, 1.01, 1.83, 1.14, 1.96 and 7.80 μg/kg for

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chloramphenicol, tetracycline (a typical drug of tetracyclines), enrofloxacin, cephalexin, sulfadiazine (a typical

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drug of sulfonamides) and melamine, respectively, satisfying the national standards for maximum residue

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limits in China. Raw milk samples were used to test the performance of the current immunoassay system, and

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the recovery rates in the repeatability tests ranged from 80% to 111%, showing a good performance. In

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summary, the immunoassay system established in this study can simultaneously detect six contaminants of

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four samples in a fully automated, cost effective and easy-to-use manner, and thus has great promise as a

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screening tool for food safety testing.

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Corresponding Authors

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*E-mail: [email protected]

Engineering Research Center for Beijing Biochip Technology, Beijing 102206, China

author at: Department of Biomedical Engineering, Tsinghua University School of Medicine, Beijing 100084, China. Tel.: +86 10 62796071.

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Introduction

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Food safety has always been an issue of concern, and several recent food safety incidents

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have stimulated the demand for the screening of the contaminants in milk 1. Among various

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contaminants in dairy products, antibiotic residues are of particular interest due to their

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frequent use in animal husbandry for infection treatment and growth promotion 2. Antibiotic

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residues can cause severe damage to human health, including allergic reactions, drug

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resistance, and enteric flora disturbance

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typical illegal additive as well, because it artificially boosts the crude protein percentage.

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Melamine and cyanuric acid mixtures can form insoluble crystals in the kidneys of babies 5.

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Due to the severity of health risks caused by these contaminants in milk, many nations and

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organizations have set strict regulations on residue limits for antibiotic residues and illegal

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additives in milk. To screen these contaminants, the establishment of rapid, sensitive and

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high-throughput detecting tools are necessary.

3,4.

In some developing countries, melamine is a

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Several methods are currently available for the detection of antibiotic residues and

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melamine, such as microbiological assays, high performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)

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and immunoassays. Among these methods, microbiological assays are inexpensive but time-

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consuming and limited in specificity and sensitivity 6. In particular, they cannot be used to

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detect melamine. Chromatographic techniques are widely used in central laboratories 7-9 due

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to their high sensitivity and specificity. However, they have some basic requirements,

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including complex sample preparation, high-cost instrumentation, and skilled personnel.

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Immunoassay-based methods, for instance, enzyme linked immunosorbent assays (ELISAs),

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have been successfully applied to detect antibiotic residues and melamine

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conventional ELISAs are labor-intensive and time-consuming, making them not suitable for 2 / 25

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But

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high-throughput screening.

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Compared to conventional ELISAs, protein microarray is an excellent tool for the

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simultaneous and high-throughput measurement of multiple analytes. In our previous studies

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13-15, protein microarray had been utilized to screen and quantify the prohibited drugs in serum

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and urine, as well as the antibiotic residues from animal tissue, and the reliability and accuracy

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of the system was confirmed by thousands of real samples. In other studies, protein

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microarrays were also proved as successfully screening tools

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technology has its disadvantages as well. The operation of conventional microarray-based

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immunoassay is sophisticated and time-consuming. To overcome these shortcomings, several

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platforms have been developed 18-20 to simplify manual operation and shorten detection time.

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Some of them are still semi-automatic 18, while the fully automated platforms that rely on

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valves and pumps to control the external reagents 19-20 are still bulky and inconvenient to use.

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Therefore, the development of a rapid, compact, automated and easy-to-use microarray-

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based immunoassay system is still highly desired.

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In our latest study

21,

16-17.

However, microarray

a centrifugal microfluidic platform with two rotation axes was

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constructed, and the basic liquid operations including liquid transport, sequential release, and

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mixing can be implemented in a simple manner, providing a new strategy for complex liquid

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manipulation. In the present work, we retrofitted this centrifugal platform and designed a

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matched microdevice with protein microarray for simultaneous screening and quantification

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of antibiotic residues (chloramphenicol (CAP), tetracyclines (TCs), enrofloxacin (ENR),

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cephalexin (CEX), sulfonamides (SAs)) and melamine (MEL) in milk samples. Liquid reagents

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can be stored in the microdevices and released on demand, which significantly increases the 3 / 25

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practicality of the platform and making the fully automated immunoassay possible. A compact

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fluorescence detection system was designed and integrated into the platform for signal

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recording, and four microdevices can be simultaneously processed, demonstrating its ability

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for multiplexed target detection of multiple samples. Overall, the centrifugal immunoassay

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system proposed in this study can successfully detect six contaminants in four milk samples

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within 17 min, offering a great potential for rapid food safety testing.

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Experiment

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Reagents and materials

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All the antibiotic standards (CAP, TCs, ENR, CEX, and SAs) were purchased from TargetMol

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(Boston, MA). TCs and SAs are two groups of broad-spectrum antibiotics, while tetracycline

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(TCN) and sulfadiazine (SDZ) are typical drugs of the TCs and SAs, respectively (Table S1). BSA-

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SDZ and its antibody (Ab) were used to detect SAs, and BSA-TCN and its Ab were used to detect

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TCs. The melamine standard was purchased from Dr. Ehrenstorfer GmbH (Augsburg,

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Germany). Six types of target molecule conjugates (CAP-BSA, TCN-BSA, ENR-BSA, CEX-BSA,

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SDZ-BSA, and MEL-BSA) and their corresponding murine monoclonal Abs were purchased

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from the Huaan Magnech Bio-Tech Company Corp. (Beijing, China). BSA conjugates were used

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as substrates to print the microarray. Stock solutions of the six contaminants were dissolved

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in methanol or acetonitrile (analytical reagent grade) purchased from Beijing Chemical

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Reagednts Company (Beijing, China) and stored at -20°C. Cy3-labeled goat anti-Mouse IgG was

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purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (Shanghai, China), and Cy3-labeled BSA (Cy3-BSA) was

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purchased from Bioss (Beijing, China). IgG produced in mice was purchased from Genia

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(Beijing, China). The printing buffer was purchased from CapitalBio Corporation (Beijing, 4 / 25

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China).

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Glass slides were purchased from Gous Optics (Shanghai, China) and modified with epoxy

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groups by CapitalBio. Ab solutions were prepared by serial dilution in 0.01 mol/L PBS (pH =

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7.4), purchased from Solarbio Science & Technology Corp. (Beijing, China). PBST (PBS with 0.05%

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Tween-20) was used as the washing buffer. Water in the experiments was purified with a Milli-

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Q system (Millipore, Beijing, China).

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Instrumentation

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The immunoassay system was developed based on a centrifugal microfluidic platform

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with two rotation axes, and the structure of the system is shown in Figure 1. The main stage

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was driven by a servo motor with its driver (YZ-ACSD608, Yizhi Technology, Shenzhen, China).

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Four micro-servo motors (RB-15PG, ALSRobot Technology, Harbin, China) were installed on

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the main stage to precisely control the angular position of each microdevice on demand. Both

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the power supply and the signal transmission were implemented through an electric slip ring

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(MOFLON, Shenzhen, China). The pulse signals to control the micro-servo motors were

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generated by a microcontroller (STC89C52) according to the instructions from the computer.

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To fix the microdevices, four plastic carriers fabricated by 3D printing (WeNext Corp.,

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Shenzhen, China) were mounted onto the micro-servo motors. The platform can be controlled

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by a laptop with a custom-made LabVIEW program (National Instruments, Austin, TX).

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For fluorescence detection, a green LED (530 nm, LUXEON, Alberta, Canada) with

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corresponding lenses was used to excite the fluorescent dye. An industrial CCD (MV-BS30U,

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CREVIS, Yongin-si, Korea), a microscope objective lens (MRH00100, Nikon, Shanghai, China),

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and an optical filter (BD570, BODIAN Optical, Beijing, China) were used to capture the images.

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Design and fabrication of the microdevice

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As shown in Figure 2, the microdevice is composed of four layers, including a pressure

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sensitive adhesive tape layer (Youbisheng Adhesive Product Corp., Hangzhou, China), a

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polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) layer, a double-sided adhesive layer (QL-9970-025, Wuxi

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Bright Technology, Wuxi, China), and a glass layer. Three metal pins were inserted into the

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microdevice as part of the three pillar valves.

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The structure of the PMMA layer is shown in Figure 2A, which was machined by a

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computerized numerical control (CNC) milling machine (Hongyang Laser Co., Ltd., Beijing,

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China). A sample chamber and three reagent storage chambers (two chambers for washing

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buffer and one chamber for secondary antibody solution) are connected to the reaction

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chamber by microchannels. There is a pillar valve (Figure S1) located between each reagent

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storage chamber and the reaction chamber. The pillar valve consists of a metal pillar and a

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through-hole of the PMMA layer. The metal pillar is embedded in the through-hole of PMMA

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layer, and the top of the connecting chamber is sealed by the PSA layer. The connecting

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chamber (4 mm in length, 4 mm in width, 0.5 mm in depth) was machined with a spherical

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cutter to get a concave bottom with rounded corner so that the PSA layer can be deformed to

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seal it perfectly. The through-hole and the pillar is under interference fit to ensure no liquid

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leakage in chip using. Once the microdevice is placed on the carrier, the pillar valves will be

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opened because the metal pins are lifted up by the pillars on the carrier (Figure S1). Thus, the

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liquid reagent can be released under the centrifugation as needed.

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Among all of the chambers in the PMMA layer, the reaction chamber is perforative, and

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a small glass slide is fixed to the reaction chamber from the backside using the double-sided

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Analytical Chemistry

Printing and immobilization of the probes

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A printing robot (Personal ArrayerTM 16, CapitalBio) was used to spot the probes onto the

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specific area of the slides interfacing with the reaction chamber (Fig, 2A). The volume of each

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probe was around 0.8 nL. After spotting, the epoxy group-modified glass slides were dried

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under vacuum at 37℃ overnight. The epoxy groups of the slides would react with the free

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amino groups of the protein, covalently linking the protein to the glass substrate.

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Two types of microdevices were contact printed. First, different concentrations of each

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BSA-antigen (Ag) solution were contact printed on the glass slides with six replicates to

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optimize the spotting concentrations (Figure S2A). Second, once the spotting concentrations

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of the Ags were determined, the six BSA-Ags of the optimal concentration and the four control

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probes (printing buffer and BSA solution as negative controls, Cy3-BSA as a printing control,

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and mouse-IgG as a positive and hybridization control) were printed on the microdevices for

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detection (Figure S2B).

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Sample preparation and recovery experiments

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Both spiked milk samples and raw milk samples were used in the experiments. Spiked milk

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samples were used as standards to acquire the standard curves, and raw milk samples were

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used to test the performance of the system. Commercial milk was purchased from local

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supermarkets (Beijing, China) to prepare the standard samples, and it was determined to be

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free of studied contaminants by HPLC-MS.

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The milk samples were prepared using the following protocol 20: the milk sample (2 mL)

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was properly mixed with 15 mL of 1% trichloroacetic acid and 3 mL of acetonitrile in a 50-mL

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polypropylene test tube by vortexing for 1 min to precipitate the proteins in milk. Then, the

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sample was centrifuged at 7000 × g for 2 min. After the layers were thoroughly separated, the 7 / 25

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middle layer was taken for subsequent analysis.

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The microdevice-based immunoassay

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Before use, the channel and reaction chamber of microdevices were incubated with PBST

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(30 μL) containing 2% BSA for 1 h to minimize non-specific binding of the Ags to the

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microdevices. Then the washing buffers and the secondary antibody solution (12 μL each)

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were added and sealed into the microdevice, which was then stored at 4°C before use.

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For chip using, the middle layer of the processed milk sample (1 ml) was mixed with Ab

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solutions (9 ml, six Ab solutions with the optimal concentrations) and loaded to the sample

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chamber. Then, the microdevice was fixed onto the carrier at the original position (α = 0°).

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After that, the automated operating procedure for immunoassay was performed as follows

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(Figure 3, Figure S3): the platform started to rotate, and the mixture in the sample chamber

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was centrifuged into the reaction chamber to perform the first affinity binding reaction. At

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this time, the microdevice was driven to tilt around the original position (α1 = -37°, α2 = +15°)

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continuously at a frequency of 1 Hz. This step was allowed to last for 200 s to accelerate the

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reaction. Subsequently, the microdevice tilted to the pre-determined angular position (α =

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+58°), and the waste was driven into the waste chamber. After the first affinity binding step,

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three more steps followed: the first washing step, the second affinity binding step, and the

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second washing step. During each step, the corresponding reagents (washing buffer Ⅰ, the

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secondary antibody solution and washing buffer Ⅱ , respectively) in the chambers were

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released to the reaction chamber sequentially at specified angular positions (α = -47°, -52°,

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and -57°), while the microdevice tilted at the same frequency (1 Hz) for 200 s, 200 s and 300

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s, respectively.

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It was found that the signal intensity can be enhanced by increasing the reaction time.

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However, too long time for affinity binding will prolong the whole detection time and thus

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restrict the practicability of the system. Therefore, the reaction time was chosen as 200 s by

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taking the above factors into consideration.

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Data acquisition and analysis

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Once the on-chip immunoassay was completed, the microdevice were illuminated by LED

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and the images captured by CCD. The differences in the median fluorescence intensity (MFI)

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between the sample and the blank (MFISample-Blank) were extracted by the LuxScan 3.0 program

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(CapitalBio).

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Data analysis was performed by using Eq. (1): 𝑀𝐹𝐼𝐼𝐶𝑎 =

100 ― 𝑎 100

× 𝑀𝐹𝐼0 (1)

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where a (%) is the inhibition ratio of the immunoassay, and MFI0 is the MFI at zero

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contaminant concentration. With the data extracted from the images, standard curves for the

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six contaminants were plotted, and the concentration of each contaminant in real samples

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was determined by referring to these standard curves.

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Results and discussion

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The efficiency of the microdevice-based immunoassay

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No extra pumps or valves were used in the current immunoassay system, and all steps

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were performed automatically after sample loading. Because the microdevices were tilting

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continuously during the entire process of the immunoassay, both the reactions and the

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washing steps were performed in a dynamic manner. As shown in Table S2, with the similar

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reaction results generated, the current immunoassay system consumes less time for affinity

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binding and washing compared to the conventional protein chip. With the accelerated

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reaction efficiency induced by continuously tilting of the microdevice, the entire duration of

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detection for the immunoassay can be shorten to as less as 17 min.

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The optimization of the concentrations of Ags and Abs

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The concentrations of BSA-Ags and monoclonal Abs are closely related to the sensitivity

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of an immunoassay. On one hand, the hybridization signals should be strong enough so that

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wide linear ranges of the standard curves can be obtained. On the other hand, the Ag

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concentrations should be kept as low as possible to lower the cost. As shown in Figure S4,

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when the concentrations of the Ab remained constant, the fluorescence intensities increased

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as a function of the printing concentration of BSA-Ags. Similarly, for a specific concentration

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of BSA-Ag, the fluorescence intensities increased with the concentrations of Ab.

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Considering both principles collectively, the spotting concentrations of CAP-BSA, TCN-BSA,

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ENR-BSA, CEX-BSA, SDZ-BSA and MEL-BSA were determined as 0.6, 0.6, 0.2, 0.4, 0.6 and 0.4

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mg/mL, respectively, and the optimal concentrations of the corresponding Abs were 2.0, 2.0,

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5.0, 2.0, 1.0 and 2.0 μg/mL, respectively. For the concentration of the secondary antibody

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solution, the increasing of it facilitates the signal intensity but the background of chip is also 10 / 25

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Analytical Chemistry

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enhanced. Therefore, an appropriate dilution ratio for the fluorescent labeled secondary

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antibody was chosen as 1:400.

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The determination of the specificity

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The specificity among the BSA-Ags and their Abs was evaluated by Ag-Ab cross-reactivities

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(CRs). Apart from the corresponding Ag-Ab at 100%, all of the other CRs were calculated using

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the ratio of MFIs between the two hybridization signals. For example, the CR between MEL-

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BSA and CAP-Ab was calculated by using Eq. (2): 𝑀𝐹𝐼(𝑀𝐸𝐿 ― 𝐵𝑆𝐴) 𝑎𝑛𝑑 (𝐶𝐴𝑃 ― 𝐴𝑏)

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CR(%) = 𝑀𝐹𝐼(𝑀𝐸𝐿 ― 𝐵𝑆𝐴) 𝑎𝑛𝑑 (𝑀𝐸𝐿 ― 𝐴𝑏) × 100% (2)

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As shown in Figure 4, all of the CRs were lower than 5%, suggesting high specificity of the

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interaction between the six Ags and their corresponding Abs 22.

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The reactivity of Abs to free antibiotics may be slightly different from the reactivity of Abs

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to BSA-Abs, and the former method is a common way to evaluate the specificity between the

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Abs and Ags 22. In our experiments, no serious cross-reactivity was found between different

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Abs and Ags (both free antibiotics and BSA coupled antibiotics).

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The CRs of the structurally related antibiotics were calculated according to Eq. (3): CR(%) =

𝐼𝐶50 (𝑆𝐷𝑍/𝑇𝐶𝑁) 𝐼𝐶50 (𝑎𝑛𝑎𝑙𝑦𝑡𝑒)

× 100% (3)

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Cross-reactivity may be a valuable asset for protein microarray because it enables

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detection of more analytes with limited number of antibodies. As shown in Table S1, the anti-

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SDZ mAb exhibited high cross-reactivity against the other eight SAs, and the anti-TCN mAb

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exhibited high cross-reactivity with the other three TCs due to their similar molecular

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structures. Therefore, this immunoassay system can be used as a screening tool to determine

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the total amount of SAs and TCs in milk rapidly and the other tools such as HPLC are needed

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to further distinct the molecules with similar structures.

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The calibration curves and sensitivity

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Competitive immunoassays were used for the detection of six contaminants in milk. In

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principle, the fluorescent signal intensity of corresponding probes decreases when the target

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substance is present because the target molecules in the samples compete with the same

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molecules immobilized on the array.

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Spiked standard samples with a series of different concentrations for each contaminant

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were prepared and analyzed following the operation protocol to obtain the standard curves.

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The ratios of MFIs for each standard and the MFI for blank milk were used to generate

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standard curves (Figure 5A). The limits of detection (LODs) were defined as the concentrations,

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which were equivalent to 10% inhibition (IC10). The limits of the working range at the high and

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low concentrations were defined as an inhibition of 80% (IC80) and 20% (IC20), respectively.

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The performance of the detection, including the IC50, the LODs and the working ranges is listed

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in Table 1.

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The results showed that the LODs of this immunoassay system were as low as 0.92, 1.01,

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1.83, 1.14, 1.96 and 7.80 μg/kg for CAP, TCN, ENR, CEX, SDZ and MEL, respectively, and all of

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the working ranges were three orders of magnitude. According to the legislation of the China

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Food and Drug Administration (CFDA), the maximum residue limits (MRLs) of TCs, CEX, SAs

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and ENR are all 100 μg/kg, falling within the working ranges of our system. Compared to other

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common methods, our system is rapid, automated and stable, with sufficient detection

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performance (Table S3).

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In the current study, the sample preparation is off-chip because some reagents and

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operations is hard to be integrated on the chip. In the future, it is possible to realize “sample-in

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and answer-out” detection by developing the sample pretreatment that is compatible with

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on-chip immunoassay, which is the goal of our future work.

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Analysis of raw milk samples

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Raw milk samples (n = 35) provided by CapitalBio were used to evaluate the analysis

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capabilities of the established system. The detection results were compared with data

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acquired by HPLC-MS method, as listed in Table 2. Even though the raw samples were more

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complex due to the existence of potential interfering substances, no false positives or false

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negatives occurred in the experiments. The deviations of detection results between our

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method and HPLC-MS method were all below 20%, demonstrating that our system can

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simultaneously detect the six contaminants in raw milk samples and the results are reliable 23-

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24.

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microdevices to ensure the consistency of detections. In this immunoassay system, more

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microdevices can be implanted on demand so that the calibration will be more convenient.

In practical application, the standard curves and calibration are needed for each batch of

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Conclusion

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In this study, an automated immunoassay system was constructed based on a centrifugal

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microfluidic platform with two rotation axes. Simultaneous detection of six contaminants

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(CAP, TCs, ENR, CEX, SAs and MEL) in milk on a single microdevice was achieved within 17 min,

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and the system was able to process four samples at a time. The calibration experiments were

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successfully performed, and the LODs and working ranges of all six contaminants were

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determined. The applicability was tested with 35 raw milk samples, and reliable results were

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obtained. In summary, our novel immunoassay system offers a rapid and automated method

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for contaminants screening and quantification in milk, and this system has the potential to be

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adapted to detect other proteins or small molecules to further aid food safety testing.

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ASSOCIATED CONTENT

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Supporting Information

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Additional information as noted in text. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at

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http:// pubs.acs.org.

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Schematic of the pillar valve; The printing design of the microdevices; Work flow of the

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microdevice; Optimization of the concentration of each Ag and primary Ab; Cross-Reactivity of

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tetracyclines and sulfonamides using tetracycline (TCN) and sulfadiazine (SDZ) as standard curves,

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respectively; Comparison of the reaction efficiency between the current immunoassay system and

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the conventional protein chip; Comparison of the proposed method with other methods for the

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detection of milk contaminant (TCN) (PDF).

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Working video of the immunoassay (mp4).

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AUTHOR INFORMATION

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Corresponding Authors

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*E-mail: [email protected]

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Acknowledgments

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This study was supported by the National Key Research and Development Program of

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China (2016YFC0800703), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31500691), and

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the Beijing Lab Foundation.

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Figures

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Figure 1. Schematic and photograph of the prototype of the immunoassay system (A-B). The

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size of the prototype is 16 cm × 16 cm × 23 cm.

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Figure 2. Structure of the microdevice. The size of the microdevice is 30 mm × 22 mm × 4.8

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mm. (A) Top view of the PMMA layer. (B) Cross-section of the microdevice. It consists of a top

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layer (pressure sensitive adhesive tape), a PMMA layer, a double-sided adhesive tape, a glass

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slide with a pre-spotted probe array, and three metal pins (parts of the pillar valves). (C)

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Photograph of the microdevice.

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Figure 3. Work flow of the microdevice. The entire process can be divided into four parts (A-

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D), each consisting of the following steps (1-4): 1) the microdevice is tilted to the original

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position (α = 0°); 2) the microdevice is tilted to the specified angular positions (α = 0°, -47°, -

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52°, -55°), and the reagent or washing buffer is driven into the reaction chamber; 3) the

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microdevice is repeatedly tilted around the original position (α1 = -37°, α2 = +15°); and 4) the

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microdevice is tilted (α = 65°), and the buffer is driven into the waste chamber. (A) The process

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of the first affinity binding step. (B) The process of the first washing step. (C) The process of

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the second affinity binding step. (D) The process of the second washing step.

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Figure 4 Cross-reactivities among the six Ags and Abs.

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Figure 5 The establishment of calibration curves. (A) Calibration curves of the six contaminants

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in milk. (B) Representative fluorescence images of microarrays during the calibration

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experiments with simulated standard samples with CAP. The concentrations of CAP are 1, 2,

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5, 10, 20, 50, 100 and 200 μg/kg (from left to right and top to bottom).

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Table 1. Detection performance of the system for the six contaminants (𝑥 ± s, n = 3). Analyte

LOD (μg/kg)

IC50 (μg/kg)

Working range (μg/kg)

MRL (μg/kg)

CAP

0.92

12.78

1.78-127.58

-

TCN

1.01

14.46

1.97-148.05

100

ENR

1.83

20.34

3.34-167.28

100

CEX

1.14

12.55

2.08-102.27

100

SDZ

1.96

23.80

3.66-211.39

100

MEL

7.80

266.96

18.86-4876.70

-

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MRL stands for the maximum residue limit according to the legislations of CFDA;

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“-” represents not allowed to exist.

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Table 2. The analytical results of 35 raw milk samples. Sample No. S2 S5 S7 S11 S13 S14 S16 S20 S21 S28 S32 S35 Others

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Analytes CAP CEX MEL CAP TCN SDZ ENR CAP TCN ENR SDZ CEX

HPLC-MS (μg/kg)

Our system (μg/kg)

113.1 83.1 308.1 48.6 18.2 159.7 246.4 109.7 143.6 15.8 40.7 21.6

99.9 78.7 329.7 45.2 20.1 138.1 197.6 102.3 129.8 14.2 45.1 19.4 ND

Each was analyzed with 3 repeats; ND means not detectable.

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Recovery rate (%) 88.3 94.7 107.0 93.0 110.4 86.5 80.2 93.2 90.4 89.9 110.8 89.8

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References:

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