γ-Aminobutyric acid (GABA), as one of two main inhibitory neurotransmitters, plays an important role in mammalian central nervous systems (CNS). However, direct measurement of GABA concentrations in the brain faces several significant challenges. It is difficult to detect GABA through an enzymatic reaction because neither oxidase nor hydrogenase can be found.
There are many techniques to detect or measure the extracellular concentrations of GABA, such as liquid chromatography with electrochemical detection (LC-ECD) by pre/post-column derivatization, fluorescence, micellar electrokinetic chromatography and laser-induced fluorescence detection (MEKC-LIFD). GABA can be detected electrochemically by transferring it to electroactive derivatives using a derivatization reaction, e.g., using derivatizing reagents. But these derivatization methods are seldom used in LC-ECD since most of the derivatizing reagents are electro-reduced at relatively negative potentials. Some researchers have used microdialysates combined with capillary zone electrophoresis (CZE), and measured charged amino acids like glutamate and aspartate. Using GABA aminotransferase (GABA-T, EC 2.6.1.19) and succinic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (SSDH, EC 1.2.1.16), enzyme catalysis reactions allows for a spectrophotometric or calorimetric assay of GABA. Spectrophotometric methods are typically not continuous because the products generated by the enzymatic reaction must be separated before further analysis. Moreover, the additions of reagents (such as NADP) to sample solution will sometimes change the physiological response of nerve cells. Some researchers have measured the GABA concentration by horseradish peroxidase (HRP)-based electrochemical detection. Most of these techniques are difficult to adapt to providing real-time and on-line analysis of GABA in a biological sample.
Embodiments of the current invention allow for real-time measurement of the neurotransmitter y-aminobutyric acid (GABA) using an acoustic impedance immunosensor. One embodiment of the invention includes a layer of piezoelectric material, at least one electrode layer fixed to the piezoelectric material and a bio-specific recognition layer formed on the electrode layer and including anti-GABA. In addition, the piezoelectric material can be a quartz crystal and the electrode layer can be constructed using gold.
A further embodiment of the invention includes an electrochemical cell, including a working electrode. The working electrode includes a layer of piezoelectric material, at least one electrode layer fixed to the piezoelectric material and a bio-specific recognition layer formed on the electrode layer and including anti-GABA. In addition, an electrochemical workstation is connected to at least one electrode of the electrochemical cell and an impedance analyzer is connected to the working electrode.
Yet another embodiment also includes a personal computer connected to the electrochemical workstation and the impedance analyzer.
One embodiment of the method of the invention includes coating a working electrode in a bio-specific recognition layer that includes anti-GABA, determining the impedance properties of the working electrode in an electrochemical cell, adding GABA to the electrochemical cell and determining the impedance properties of the working electrode in the presence of the GABA. In a further embodiment, the GABA is added to the electrochemical cell in a buffer solution.
Embodiments of acoustic impedance immunosensor in accordance with the present invention are capable of real-time measurement of GABA in buffer solution. Several embodiments include a bio-specific recognition layer on a quartz crystal surface, where the bio-specific recognition layer is formed by molecular self-assembly on a gold electrode surface. Various real time measurements can be made by examining the impedance parameters of the quartz crystal on which the bio-specific recognition layer is located as it interacts with GABA.
A semi-schematic view of an embodiment of an acoustic immunosensor in accordance with aspects of the present invention is shown in
The electrochemical workstation in combination with the three electrodes can be used to measure the current in the electrochemical cell as a function of potential. This can be achieved by measuring the current in the electrochemical cell and varying the voltage between the working electrode and the reference electrode.
The concentration of GABA in a solution placed in the electrochemical cell can change the impedance characteristics of the working electrode. The impedance characteristics include capacitance, resistance, and inductance. The impedance analyzer can be used to determine the presence and quantity of GABA contained in the solution by measuring, in real time, the impedance characteristics of the working electrode as a chemical reaction takes place.
The computer can be used to control the electrochemical workstation and the impedance analyzer individually or in conjunction with one another. The computer may also be used for data acquisition and storage purposes.
Another embodiment of an acoustic immunosensor 30 in accordance with the present invention is illustrated in
In one embodiment, the counter electrode is made from platinum wire and the reference electrode is made from silver/silver chloride. In other embodiments, the counter (and reference electrode can be made from any other material that can be used as a reference or counter electrode in an electrochemical cell.
An embodiment of a working electrode in accordance with the present invention is illustrated in
In one embodiment, the quartz crystal is a piezoelectric quartz crystal that is an AT-cut, quartz plate with a diameter of 13.7 mm, which is sandwiched between gold electrodes of diameter 7.82 mm. One side of the quartz crystal can be exposed by sealing the crystal to one side of a glass tube. In other embodiments, other piezoelectric and electrode materials can be used in the construction of the working embodiment.
In one embodiment, the bio-specific recognition layer can be formed by molecular self-assembly on the gold electrode surface. The composition and method of constructing the bio-specific recognition layer are discussed below.
In one embodiment, the electrolyte solution can be 0.1M PBS+0.5 mM K4Fe(CN)6+0.5 mM K3Fe(CN)6. In other embodiments, other electrolytes that one of ordinary skill in the art would consider to be appropriate for use in an electrochemical chemical cell in conjunction with GABA can be utilized.
A method of constructing a working electrode in accordance with an embodiment of the present invention is illustrated in
A method of preparing to construct a working electrode in accordance with the present invention is illustrated in
A method of modifying the surfaces of the gold electrodes in accordance with the practice of the present invention is illustrated in
In one embodiment, the quartz crystal to which the gold electrodes are attached are pretreated (140) by immersing them in 1.0M NaOH for 20 min, followed by rinsing (142) with deionized water. The resulting crystals are then soaked (144) in 1.0M HCl for 2 min, rinsed (146) with deionized water and dried (148) under a stream of air. Concentrated hydrochloric acid, 50 μl, is placed (150) on the gold electrode surface for 2 min. The hydrochloric acid is then rinsed (152) from the crystal with ethanol and deionized water. For covalent binding of bio-ligands, the gold surface of electrodes on the crystals are chemically activated at the beginning. The crystals washed (154) in acetone are incubated (156) with a 0.02M aqueous solution of cystamine dihydrochloride for 2 h. After washing (156) in ethanol and deionized water and drying at laboratory temperatures, the monolayer-modified crystal is further activated (160) by glutaraldehyde (2.5% in water) for 1 h.
A method of applying anti-GABA to the gold electrode surface in accordance with the practice of the present invention is illustrated in
In one embodiment, the quartz crystal and the electrodes affixed to it are washed (170) with deionized water. Then 20 μl of 20 μgml−1 anti-GABA solution (1:100 dilution from stock solution) is spread (172) on the gold electrode surfaces of the crystal. The impedance parameters of the crystal are recorded as soon as the anti-GABA solution is added on the surface of the crystal. After being kept for 1 h and 20 min, the electrode is washed (174) with PBS (pH 7.4). After further washing (176) in deionized water and drying in air, the crystal is stored in a dry state for 10 h. Following storage, the completed working electrode is capable of use in a system in accordance with the present invention for measuring the presence of GABA.
A method of measuring GABA in a solution in accordance with the practice of the present invention is illustrated in
Acoustic immunosensors and methods of using the acoustic immunosensors in accordance with the present invention are discussed above. Examples of the outputs generated by acoustic immunosensors in accordance with the present invention are presented below. In order to assist in the understanding of the outputs generated by the acoustic immunosensor, the theory behind the operation of the acoustic immunosensor is described. The theory is presented only as a framework for explaining the output of the acoustic immunosensor and does not in any way limit the inventions described herein.
Piezoelectric mass detection is based on the linear relationship between the resonant frequency changes (Δf) of a piezoelectric quartz crystal and mass changes (Δm) on its surface as described by the Sauerbrey equation:
This simple oscillator method is an excellent choice for measuring mass changes in rigid films but is impacted by several constraints while measuring non-rigid films. It has been found that changes in the physico-chemical properties and/or changes of the contacting materials/media will result in frequency changes of the quartz crystal when it is used in liquid phase. For example, the effect of density (ρL) and viscosity (ηL) of the liquid on the resonant frequency changes is as follows:
As for static capacitance C0, the quartz crystal is physically equivalent to a simple parallel-plate capacitor with a capacitance of:
A Butterworth-Van Dyke (BVD) equivalent circuit model is shown in
Y=G+jB (4)
The phase angle of admittance, θY, should be θY=tan−1 (B/G). The frequency fs, at which G is maximum (Gmax), is given by:
When applied in liquid phase, the surface of the quartz crystal will introduce dissipative energy losses in the oscillating system when used in liquid. The dissipation factor, D, is the inverse of the more well known Q-factor as shown below:
The motional resistance R1 of the quartz crystal in a Newtonian liquid can be mathematically described as shown below:
Similarly, we obtain:
ΔD=−8π2ƒsCQLQΔƒs (9)
The theoretical slope values for ΔR1 versus Δfs and ΔD versus Δfs are 0.053 ΩHz−1 and 1.99×10.7 Hz−1, respectively, for the quartz crystal used in this work. In practical measurements, it is likely that a smaller ratio of ΔR1 versus Δfs (or ΔD versus Δfs) indicates less contribution from the “viscosity-density” effect (i.e., so called “non-mass” effect) on total frequency changes, and vice versa. Therefore, the slope of ΔR1 versus Δfs and ΔD versus Δfs can be used to investigated the viscoelastic properties of the thin film on the quartz crystal.
The electrochemical interface can be represented by the electrolyte resistance (RΩ) in series with a double capacitance (Cd) in parallel with the Faradic impedance (Zf) (as shown in
The various chemical reactions involved in creating a bio-specific recognition layer on a working electrode and in measuring GABA using the working electrode in accordance with the practice of the present invention are shown in
The various chemical reactions are described above. The final equation shows the bonding of GABA to the anti-GABA within the bio-specific recognition layr. Measuring the impedance parameters of the working electrode prior to the addition of GABA and following the addition of GABA provides information concerning the amount of GABA present.
The process of calculating the impedance parameters when anti-GABA is added to the surface of the working electrode in order to calibrate the working electrode is discussed above. A chart showing the impedance parameters of a working electrode in accordance with the present invention, when an anti-GABA solution is applied to the surface of the working electrode, is shown in
Period I
During period I, R1 shows an increase from 62.3 to 253.1 Ω (antibody solution uploading) within 223 s (corresponding to a decrease in Δfs of approximately −9730 Hz within the same time), suggesting a considerable change in viscosity-density of the boundary layer adjacent to the surface of quartz crystal. Using the estimated changes in R1 and the theoretical slope of R1 versus Δfs, the contribution of “non-mass” effect on total resonant frequency changes ((253.1−62.3)Ω/0.053 ΩHz−1=3600 Hz) in this period is estimated to be 37% ((9730−3600)/9730=37%), under our experimental conditions. Due to mass loading on the gold electrode after the addition of the antibody, both Δfs and L1 decrease (L1 from 4.2 to 3.7 mH). During this same period, C1 increases from 59.9 to 68.4 fF, while C0 decreases from 14.1 to 13.3 pF. In period I, as soon as the antibody solution is added, this sudden mass loading on the surface of the quartz crystal leads to a sharp decrease in frequency. Meanwhile, the shear acoustic wave energy transmitted between the two electrodes of the quartz crystal is increasingly damped, i.e., energy dissipation (D) increases considerably. Increase in R1 and D concomitant to a decrease in series resonant frequency (as shown in
Period II
During the time period II, concomitant with the decrease in Δfs, both R1 and C1 show a gradually increasing trend while L1 is continuously decreasing. The changes in C0 during this period are not as obvious. During this stage, the antibody droplet starts to spread out on the gold electrode surface and the water molecules begin to evaporate from the electrode surface. These two simultaneous responses can give rise to contrary effects on the frequency changes: the former resulting in a decrease in Δfs because more antibody molecules are deposited on the surface in terms of gravitational force, while the latter contributes to an increase in Δfs due to a decrease in mass. The former effect often dominates as the resonant frequency curve shows a gradual decline during time period II. Other parameters in this period change less significantly over time period II as compared to period I. This phenomenon may be explained by the following: (1) chemical kinetics involved in the formation of a bond between the amino group (—NH2) in the antibody (a protein) and the aldehyde group (—CHO) in one terminal of glutaraldehyde (the other terminal has been bound with the amino group of cystamine). This chemical bond will allow several antibody protein molecules to reside in the proximity of the gold electrode surface. Moreover, van der Waals force will facilitate the formation of the second monolayer of antibody protein on the gold surface, but this second adsorbed layer will not begin to form until the first has, for the most part, been fully occupied; (2) the microrheological changes of the protein adsorbed-layer and/or water incorporation into the proteins/polypeptide framework on the adsorbed layer; (3) the interfacial friction occurring in the droplet spreading process in this stage. Furthermore, residual moisture content beyond a monolayer increases the conformational flexibility and the ability of less tightly bound water to mobilize reactants, thereby accelerating interaction of antibody molecules with cross-linkers previously assembled on the gold surface. It is also known that protein molecules themselves show quite different adsorption behaviors on diverse hydrophobic monolayers and hydrophilic surfaces. All factors described above contribute to the energy dissipation of any shear wave penetrating into the contacting media, so R1 and D (in
Period III
During time period III, Δfs continues to decrease as it did towards the end of period II (see
Period IV
During time period IV, all the circuit parameters continue the trends seen after the abrupt change towards the end of period III. A sharp increase in Δfs (4589 Hz) and L1 (0.43 mH) and the rapid decrease in R1, C1, and C0 (−0.109 Ω, −.7.0 fF and −.0.33 pF, respectively) are observed within 100 s. It should be pointed out that C0 decreases first and then subsequently increases in this period (and in the next period V). As expected, during period IV, the resonant frequency is continuously increasing (see
Period V
During time period V, good correlation between Δfs and t, ΔR1 and Δfs, and ΔD and Δfs is observed. But C1 and C0 are initially constant before increasing, while L1 starts decreasing after an initial constant period. The impedance parameters change much slower during this period compared to changes in period IV (as shown in
Period VI
In the latter stages of period V, there is protein aggregation on the gold surface and the water in bulk antibody solution and in protein intermolecules has been removed. Therefore, the resonant frequencies as well as the impedance parameters reach a relative steady state in period VI. Compared with the baseline values in air (before antibody addition on the gold surface), the changes of four circuit elements during this period (also in air) are: ΔC0=−1.44 pF, ΔC1=1.89 fF, ΔL1=−0.13 mH, and ΔR1=−0.0072 Ω. The changes in series resonant frequency, Δfs=−3481 Hz. There is no significant change in motional resistance R1, before and after the antibody immobilization onto the gold surface of the quartz crystal, suggesting that the changes in resonant frequency due to antibody immobilization are predominantly caused by mass loading on the quartz crystal. After the resonant frequency fs of the immunosensor in buffer solution reaches a steady value (with variations of approximately ±3˜5 Hz min−1), as described in the previous sections, the experiment for GABA binding measurement can be performed.
Once the acoustic immunosensor has been calibrated, measurements can be made using the working electrode. In one embodiment, measurements can be made by placing the anti-GABA-coated immunosensor in a PBS buffer solution containing GABA in a phosphate buffer. The equivalent circuit parameters can then be measured in situ during the immunological binding reaction.
A chart showing the measured impedance parameters of an acoustic immunosensor in accordance with the practice of the present invention which is measuring 10 μl of M−3M GABA solution in a 5 ml phosphate buffer (p.H—7.4) is shown in
The time course of impedance responses of the immunosensor during GABA binding in phosphate buffer solution (PBS) is illustrated. The final GABA concentration in buffer is 38.0 μM. As soon as GABA solution is added, the series resonant frequency (Δfs) curve decreases sharply and then gradually reaches a steady value. Within the first 5 s of GABA addition, the frequency drops by 140 Hz and gradually reaches a steady value with a total change in resonant frequency of approximately 180 Hz. The immunosensor gave no significant response in R1 (about 0.5 Ω increase, not shown here) when the GABA solution was added into the detector cell. Further, there was only 0.3 Ω increase in R1 when the same amount of buffer solution is added. These results indicate that the immunosensor developed here can be specific to GABA binding in a buffer solution. Moreover, the smaller R1 changes in GABA binding indicate that the “mass” effect plays a key role in the observed changes in resonant frequency.
The specificity of the acoustic immunosensor of the present invention against common neurochemical interferents like 1-aspartic acid, 1-glutamine, 1-alanine, 5-aminovaleric acid, glycine, (S)-(+)-2-aminobutyric acid is discussed below in relation to
Analysis
The electrochemical characterization of present patterned gold surface is shown in
As for EIS results, it is evident that the charge transfer resistance Rct (as shown in
The use of an acoustic wave based immunosensor to measure the adsorption process of anti-GABA protein in air and immuno-interaction of anti-GABA and GABA in liquid. In air, the antibody adsorption is comprised of several different processes as shown by the changes observed in the resonant frequency of the quartz crystal and the different electrical model parameters. These surface processes are primarily influenced by water incorporation and evaporation in the protein layer as shown by the equivalent circuit analysis. Based on the slope values of the equivalent circuit impedance parameters during these surface processes, the energy damping and dissipation of the shear acoustic wave into media have been determined. Furthermore, the contributions of “non-mass” effect on total resonant frequency changes are estimated in protein adsorption and binding reaction processes. The electrochemical behavior of the gold electrode indicates some irreversible changes after GABA binding reaction. The biomolecules-modified gold electrode was electrochemically characterized by CV and EIS methods. Changes in the electrochemical impedance parameters reflect the underlying biomolecular changes on the gold surface of the immunosensor before and after various surface modification procedures. The output of the piezoelectric impedance immunosensor provides a real-time and continuous measurement of GABA concentration. In other embodiments, the acoustic immunosensor can be used in biointerfacial reaction measurements and bioprocess monitoring.
In all of the methods described above, the chemicals described can be obtained from Sigma-Aldrich Co. of St. Louis, Mo. The chemicals used are preferably of analytical grade or better.
As is discussed above, the adsorption process of anti-GABA on an the surface of an electrode constructed in accordance with the present invention and the immuno-interaction between GABA and anti-GABA in liquid can be measured in real-time by a network analyzer and changes in the electrical equivalent circuit parameters (□f, C0, R1, L1, C1). These impedance parameters can be used to analyze changes in the interfacial viscoelastic properties during adsorption of liquid anti-GABA in air and during binding between GABA and anti-GABA in liquid phase. The detailed description, which is set forth above, in connection with the appended drawings is intended as a description of embodiments of the acoustic impedance immunosensor of the present invention and is not intended to represent the only forms in which the present invention may be constructed or utilized. It is to be understood, however, that the same or equivalent functions and steps may be accomplished by different embodiments, which are also intended to be encompassed within the spirit and scope of the invention.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application No. 60/495,234, filed Aug. 13, 2003, which is hereby incorporated by reference as if set forth in full herein.
Financial assistance for this project was provided by National Institute of Health Nos. IR43NS046088-01 and R21NS41681. Thus, the United States Government has certain rights to this invention.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60495234 | Aug 2003 | US |