1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to the fields of food safety assessment, environmental field detection, veterinary, agricultural, and point-of-care clinical sensors and diagnostics. These areas require ultrasensitive and rapid assays for analytes such as bacterial and viral pathogens or parasites and clinically important analytes or biomarkers in order to detect the few microbes or molecules capable of causing disease or indicating the early presence of disease or potential toxicity and harm. Yet, these areas require analysis of small sample quantities (e.g., 100 μL or lesser quantities) in a rapid fashion (within minutes) on-site or at the bedside to avoid costly and time-consuming transportation to central laboratories. These areas are also plagued with “dirty” samples and complex matrices such as food samples, blood, urine, and body fluids or turbid water samples.
2. Background Information
Considering the difficult requirements for environmental and clinical detection and diagnostics, the present invention strives to integrate the highest affinity receptors (aptamers and antibodies) with the most sensitive fluorescence technology available (e.g., quantum dots “QD's” or fluorophore-filled plastic nanoparticles) and a simple magnetic concentration and separation approach to amplify and purify the sample in a small (credit card-sized) format that is disposable and could be hermetically sealed for chain of custody requirements, if desired. For a number of applications, assay speed and ultrasensitivity are desired. In the food safety arena, extreme speed and sensitivity are desirable to minimize or eliminate the enrichment culture phase of detection, because during that period of hours to days when bacteria are being cultured from a food sample, potentially contaminated foods can be sold and consumed by humans, possibly resulting in illness or death for the consumer. In biowarfare or bioterrorism detection, speed and sensitivity are desired to enable a soldier or first responder to don protective masks, gloves, overgarments or other gear and thereby minimize or prevent exposure to deadly pathogens, toxins or other substances. Although, the present invention, magnetically-assisted test strip (“MATS”) is intended to combine aptamer-MB or antibody-MB and QD-based assays into a simple cartridge format, other visible or less sensitive assays (e.g., competitive displacement FRET) assays are also possible within the framework of a MATS cartridge and are therefore claimed.
Several related inventions such as a line of electrochemiluminescence (“ECL”) sensors rely on micron-sized magnetic beads (“MB's”) to aid in purifying and concentrating target analytes from the sample matrix. ECL devices are generally large (greater than a cubic foot). Only recently, have ECL devices been developed that are handheld or compact and portable. Others have developed larger immunomagnetic (antibody-MB) separation and detection devices that are of the table-top variety consisting of a cubic foot or more in volume. Such devices were designed and constructed to handle large sample volumes (e.g., ≧10 mL).
Existing technologies have a similar concept, but with several important differences: 1) do not mention QDs as possible fluorophores in their system, 2) assay pathways are complex and tortuous with numerous bifurcations, whereas the MATS microchannels are typically straight or uncomplicated, 3) existing devices employ microscopic valves, which are not necessary in the linear fluid channel design of the MATS especially when a nitrocellulose paper strip or other matrix material is added in the channels.
Other existing art utilizes MBs in biosensor assay cartridges in various ways. Their detection schemes do not involve fluorescence, but are based on other visual means of detection or measurement of the magnetic field around the MB before and after binding of an analyte, which has certain advantages in terms of simplicity, but may not be as sensitive as the fluorescence intensity or ECL methods and is certainly not as sensitive as the time-resolved fluorescence methods.
The present invention is referred to as a “Magnetically Assisted Test Strip” (“MATS”), which is reminiscent of immunochromatographic test strips employing latex microbeads, except that by using MBs, the operator has control over the flow rate of the particles along their path toward the formation of a sandwich, FRET, or other type of assay on the MB's surface. Control of the MB flow rate is imposed via an external magnetic field such as a permanent magnet or electromagnet that moves the MBs along the channel and halts the MBs wherever critical reagents or sample components must be picked up. The MATS would typically be encased in a plastic cartridge and is therefore referred to as the “MATS cartridge.”
The present invention provides a small (business card-sized) disposable mesofluidic or microfluidic plastic cartridge containing several straight microchannels potentially filled with culture media, solubilizing reagents (e.g., detergents) nitrocellulose paper strip, gel or other matrix materials and lyophilized paramagnetic microbeads or microparticles coated with antibodies, nucleic acid aptamers, oligonucleotides, or other types of proteins or other receptors for capture and concentration of target analytes in environmental, food, animal, or clinical body fluid samples. Target analytes in fluids are allowed to wet and interact with the lyophilized capture reagent-magnetic beads and are then moved to a second position by means of an external magnetic field. Along the way, any debris or interfering material that was in the sample tends to be left behind, thereby purifying and concentrating the target. At the second position, the captured target analytes on the surface of the magnetic beads interact with secondary or “reporter” reagents, such as fluorescent dye-, fluorophore-, fluorescent protein-, quantum dot (“QD”)-, nanoparticle-(“NP”), colloidal gold-, or enzyme-conjugated antibodies, nucleic acid aptamers or fluorescence resonance energy transfer (“FRET”) reagents such as FRET-aptamers or molecular beacons. In effect, a mobile or “rolling” sandwich assay is formed on the magnetic bead's surface. These reactants on the magnetic bead are further translated by the external magnetic field to a third position, which is a transparent miniature detection window for viewing of the resulting fluorescence or other visible reactions. Again, in the process of moving from the second to the third position, unwanted materials such as unbound reporter reagents tend to be left behind. In another configuration, the magnetically immobilized beads in the detection window could be back-flushed and washed, if desired, by means of a buffer-loaded syringe or small pump. Finally, results are detected or quantified by fluorometer, fluorescence intensity, spectrofluorometry features, fluorescence lifetime analysis, spectrophotometry, spectrofluorometer, time-resolved fluorometer, photodiode, photodiode array, charge-couple device (“CCD”) camera, complementary metal oxide semiconductor (“CMOS”), photomultiplier tube (“PMT”), or visual assessment of the magnetic bead-target complexes in the miniature detection window. Because, several types (sizes) of quantum dots can be simultaneously detected based on their fluorescence emission, simultaneous multiplexed detection of several target analytes is also possible. Finally, a means of covalently attaching QDs or other fluorophores to the 3′ end of DNA aptamers is disclosed for conjugate development and use in the detection assays and cartridges.
The void or working volume of the MATS cartridge is small and typically in the range of 50 μL to 100 μL. With such a reduced sample volume, it is necessary to concentrate all the available analyte to a small point, such as the surface of a MB, and to use an ultrasensitive detection technology, such as QD technology. Approximately 60 zeptomolar (60×10−21 M) levels have been detected from time-resolved immuno-QD assays for prostate specific antigen (“PSA”). Even simple fluorescence intensity readings employing QDs have proven quite sensitive. There is the potential for detecting as low as one bacterium with antibody-QD conjugates in some systems.
Moreover, there has been discrimination of fluorescence signals from four different biotoxin assays using various types of QDs in the same microtitre well, thus supporting the claim that multiplex analyses are possible in the same microchannel of a MATS cartridge. Hence, if a MATS cartridge is designed with five different microchannels leading to five different detection windows and four different analytes can be detected in each by multiplexing and detecting four different emission wavelengths at the same time, then a panel of twenty different tests can be run in a single MATS cartridge within minutes.
If the target analyte is entangled or encased within a tissue matrix or cell, such as Leishmania bacteria in a macrophage, a malaria parasite within an erythrocyte or an intracellular protein of interest, a MATS cartridge can be designed with a pre-processing “chamber” in its flow path for extricating the target or dissolving away the matrix to reveal the target via dried chaotropic agents, detergents, or enzymes. Likewise, bacterial numbers can be increased to improve odds of detection in an enrichment culturing pre-processing chamber of a MATS cartridge. Such an enrichment culturing chamber or region in the MATS flow path would contain lyophilized nutrients that would support the growth and replication of bacteria upon wetting by the sample. Incorporation of an enrichment culturing chamber or region and dried culture media such as nutrient broth (“NB”), tryptic soy broth (“TSB”), brain heart infusion (“BHI”) broth, other common, or specialized microbiological culture media prior to the start of the rolling sandwich assays in the channels of the MATS cartridge can serve to increase numbers of bacteria by supporting bacterial replication after a sufficient enrichment period from foods, body fluids, environmental or other samples prior to analysis.
A solubilizing or dissolution chamber or area may be incorporated into the channels. A solubilizing or dissolution chamber or area would contain ionic or nonionic detergents, enzymes, or chaotropic agents such as sodium dodecyl sulfate (“SDS”), Triton detergents (e.g., Triton X-100), Tween detergents (Tween 20, Tween 80, etc.), trypsin, proteinase K, magnesium chloride (MgCl2) or other solubilizing and degrading agents in sufficient quantities to release bacteria, parasites, or viruses from meats, tissue particles, or cells, etc. or to release detectable levels of target proteins or other antigens prior to the rolling sandwich assays in the channels of the MATS cartridge.
MATS cartridges may employ a number of QD-conjugated or other fluorophore-conjugated DNA aptamers, such as using covalent attachment chemistry for proteins to the N6 primary aryl amine of the terminal 3′ adenine added by Taq polymerase during the polymerase chain reaction (“PCR”) via bifunctional aldehydes (e.g., glutaraldehyde), succinimides, or other bifunctional linkers. Alternatively, adenine, cytosine, and guanine added by terminal deoxynucleotide transferase (“TdT”) to blunt-ended double-stranded (“ds”) DNA can be used as well, since the primary amines in these terminal nucleotides are the only susceptible groups for chemical attachment in otherwise ds DNA. Attachment to the 3′ end of aptamers and other types of DNA probes is desirable because it confers greater serum stability. Use of 3′-adenine attachment chemistry arises by involving N6 of adenine and bifunctional aldehydes (e.g., glutaraldehyde) or other amine-reactive homobifunctional linkers or heterobifunctional linkers (such as succinimide linkers) for any DNA aptamer-QD or other oligonucleotide-QD, fluorophore, or nanoparticle linkages. A 3′-adenine overhang can be obtained by one round of polymerase chain reaction (PCR) using conventional Taq DNA polymerase. Hence a complementary strand to the intended aptamer or oligonucleotide sequence is used followed by one round of PCR, resulting in a 3′-adenine overhang. N6 of the adenine is therefore the only susceptible target on the otherwise double-stranded DNA where bifunctional aldehydes or other linkers can attack for conjugation of QDs, nanoparticles, fluorescent proteins, or other fluorophores. The resulting DNA-fluorescent conjugate entity can be made single-stranded by that application of heat or denaturing agents such as urea and purified by size-exclusion chromatography, gel electrophoresis or other standard molecular separation techniques and used in assays within a MATS cartridge.
This same chemical attachment strategy for proteins to ds DNA PCR products can be applied to the chemical conjugation of ds aptamers to amine-QD, carboxyl-QD or other derivatized QD conjugates. The N6 aryl amine of adenine may be used for attachment to amine-QDs by means of a carbodiimide binfunctional linker. The aptamer-QDs made by this method can be valuable reagents in the sandwich and other assays employed in a MATS cartridge. Therefore, the chemical conjugation method using primary amines from adenine, cytosine, or guanine with aldehyde or succinimide-based bifunctional linkers and derivatized QDs is claimed as part of the MATS assay methodology.
The method herein may also use TdT to add adenine, cytosine, or guanine residues to blunt-ended double stranded DNA aptamers or oligonucleotides followed by attachment of bisaldehydes (e.g., glutaraldehyde) or other suitable amine-reactive homobifunctional or heterobifunctional linkers for conjugation of the aptamer or oligonucleotide at its 3′ end to a QD, fluorophore, fluorophore-filled nanoparticle, or fluorescent protein at the vulnerable primary aryl amine of adenine, cytosine, or guanine. The resulting DNA-fluorescent conjugate entity can be made single-stranded by the application of heat or denaturing agents such as urea and purified by size-exclusion chromatography, gel electrophoresis or other standard molecular separation techniques.
Referring to the figures,
This application is based upon and claims priority from U.S. Provisional application Ser. No. 60/680,979, which is incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country | |
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60680979 | May 2005 | US |