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Magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices

BACKGROUND: Introduction of effective point-of-care devices for use in medical diagnostics is part of strategies to combat accelerating health-care costs. Molecular motor driven nanodevices have unique potentials in this regard due to unprecedented level of miniaturization and independence of extern...

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Autores principales: Kumar, Saroj, ten Siethoff, Lasse, Persson, Malin, Albet-Torres, Nuria, Månsson, Alf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3660291/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23638952
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-3155-11-14
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author Kumar, Saroj
ten Siethoff, Lasse
Persson, Malin
Albet-Torres, Nuria
Månsson, Alf
author_facet Kumar, Saroj
ten Siethoff, Lasse
Persson, Malin
Albet-Torres, Nuria
Månsson, Alf
author_sort Kumar, Saroj
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Introduction of effective point-of-care devices for use in medical diagnostics is part of strategies to combat accelerating health-care costs. Molecular motor driven nanodevices have unique potentials in this regard due to unprecedented level of miniaturization and independence of external pumps. However motor function has been found to be inhibited by body fluids. RESULTS: We report here that a unique procedure, combining separation steps that rely on antibody-antigen interactions, magnetic forces applied to magnetic nanoparticles (MPs) and the specificity of the actomyosin bond, can circumvent the deleterious effects of body fluids (e.g. blood serum). The procedure encompasses the following steps: (i) capture of analyte molecules from serum by MP-antibody conjugates, (ii) pelleting of MP-antibody-analyte complexes, using a magnetic field, followed by exchange of serum for optimized biological buffer, (iii) mixing of MP-antibody-analyte complexes with actin filaments conjugated with same polyclonal antibodies as the magnetic nanoparticles. This causes complex formation: MP-antibody-analyte-antibody-actin, and magnetic separation is used to enrich the complexes. Finally (iv) the complexes are introduced into a nanodevice for specific binding via actin filaments to surface adsorbed molecular motors (heavy meromyosin). The number of actin filaments bound to the motors in the latter step was significantly increased above the control value if protein analyte (50–60 nM) was present in serum (in step i) suggesting appreciable formation and enrichment of the MP-antibody-analyte-antibody-actin complexes. Furthermore, addition of ATP demonstrated maintained heavy meromyosin driven propulsion of actin filaments showing that the serum induced inhibition was alleviated. Detailed analysis of the procedure i-iv, using fluorescence microscopy and spectroscopy identified main targets for future optimization. CONCLUSION: The results demonstrate a promising approach for capturing analytes from serum for subsequent motor driven separation/detection. Indeed, the observed increase in actin filament number, in itself, signals the presence of analyte at clinically relevant nM concentration without the need for further motor driven concentration. Our analysis suggests that exchange of polyclonal for monoclonal antibodies would be a critical improvement, opening for a first clinically useful molecular motor driven lab-on-a-chip device.
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spelling pubmed-36602912013-05-22 Magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices Kumar, Saroj ten Siethoff, Lasse Persson, Malin Albet-Torres, Nuria Månsson, Alf J Nanobiotechnology Research BACKGROUND: Introduction of effective point-of-care devices for use in medical diagnostics is part of strategies to combat accelerating health-care costs. Molecular motor driven nanodevices have unique potentials in this regard due to unprecedented level of miniaturization and independence of external pumps. However motor function has been found to be inhibited by body fluids. RESULTS: We report here that a unique procedure, combining separation steps that rely on antibody-antigen interactions, magnetic forces applied to magnetic nanoparticles (MPs) and the specificity of the actomyosin bond, can circumvent the deleterious effects of body fluids (e.g. blood serum). The procedure encompasses the following steps: (i) capture of analyte molecules from serum by MP-antibody conjugates, (ii) pelleting of MP-antibody-analyte complexes, using a magnetic field, followed by exchange of serum for optimized biological buffer, (iii) mixing of MP-antibody-analyte complexes with actin filaments conjugated with same polyclonal antibodies as the magnetic nanoparticles. This causes complex formation: MP-antibody-analyte-antibody-actin, and magnetic separation is used to enrich the complexes. Finally (iv) the complexes are introduced into a nanodevice for specific binding via actin filaments to surface adsorbed molecular motors (heavy meromyosin). The number of actin filaments bound to the motors in the latter step was significantly increased above the control value if protein analyte (50–60 nM) was present in serum (in step i) suggesting appreciable formation and enrichment of the MP-antibody-analyte-antibody-actin complexes. Furthermore, addition of ATP demonstrated maintained heavy meromyosin driven propulsion of actin filaments showing that the serum induced inhibition was alleviated. Detailed analysis of the procedure i-iv, using fluorescence microscopy and spectroscopy identified main targets for future optimization. CONCLUSION: The results demonstrate a promising approach for capturing analytes from serum for subsequent motor driven separation/detection. Indeed, the observed increase in actin filament number, in itself, signals the presence of analyte at clinically relevant nM concentration without the need for further motor driven concentration. Our analysis suggests that exchange of polyclonal for monoclonal antibodies would be a critical improvement, opening for a first clinically useful molecular motor driven lab-on-a-chip device. BioMed Central 2013-05-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3660291/ /pubmed/23638952 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-3155-11-14 Text en Copyright © 2013 Kumar et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Kumar, Saroj
ten Siethoff, Lasse
Persson, Malin
Albet-Torres, Nuria
Månsson, Alf
Magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices
title Magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices
title_full Magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices
title_fullStr Magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices
title_full_unstemmed Magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices
title_short Magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices
title_sort magnetic capture from blood rescues molecular motor function in diagnostic nanodevices
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3660291/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23638952
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1477-3155-11-14
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