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Bio-CaRGOS: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin

Room temperature biospecimen storage for prolonged periods is essential to eliminate energy consumption by ultra-low freezing or refrigeration-based storage techniques. State of the art practices that sufficiently minimize the direct or hidden costs associated with cold-chain logistics include ambie...

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Autores principales: Boylan, Jack, Chauhan, Rajat, Koneru, Kavya, Bansal, Meenakshi, Kalbfleisch, Theodore, Potnis, Chinmay S., Hartline, Kendall, Keynton, Robert S., Gupta, Gautam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8697545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35423878
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra00987g
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author Boylan, Jack
Chauhan, Rajat
Koneru, Kavya
Bansal, Meenakshi
Kalbfleisch, Theodore
Potnis, Chinmay S.
Hartline, Kendall
Keynton, Robert S.
Gupta, Gautam
author_facet Boylan, Jack
Chauhan, Rajat
Koneru, Kavya
Bansal, Meenakshi
Kalbfleisch, Theodore
Potnis, Chinmay S.
Hartline, Kendall
Keynton, Robert S.
Gupta, Gautam
author_sort Boylan, Jack
collection PubMed
description Room temperature biospecimen storage for prolonged periods is essential to eliminate energy consumption by ultra-low freezing or refrigeration-based storage techniques. State of the art practices that sufficiently minimize the direct or hidden costs associated with cold-chain logistics include ambient temperature storage of biospecimens (i.e., DNA, RNA, proteins, lipids) in the dry state. However, the biospecimens are still well-exposed to the stress associated with drying and reconstitution cycles, which augments the pre-analytical degradation of biospecimens prior to their downstream processing. An aqueous storage solution that can eliminate these stresses which are correlated to several cycles of drying/rehydration or freezing of biospecimens, is yet to be achieved by any current technology. In our study, we have addressed this room temperature biospecimen-protection challenge using aqueous capture and release gels for optimized storage (Bio-CaRGOS) of biospecimens. Herein, we have demonstrated a single-step ∼95% recovery of a metalloprotein hemoglobin at room temperature using a cost-effective standard microwave-based aqueous formulation of Bio-CaRGOS. Although hemoglobin samples are currently stored at sub-zero or under refrigeration (4 °C) conditions to avoid loss of integrity and an unpredictable diagnosis during their downstream assays, our results have displayed an unprecedented room temperature integrity preservation of hemoglobin. Bio-CaRGOS formulations efficiently preserve hemoglobin in its native state, with single-step protein recovery of ∼95% at ambient conditions (1 month) and ∼96% (7 months) under refrigeration conditions. In contrast, two-thirds of the control samples degrade under ambient (1 month) and refrigeration (7 months) settings.
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spelling pubmed-86975452022-04-13 Bio-CaRGOS: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin Boylan, Jack Chauhan, Rajat Koneru, Kavya Bansal, Meenakshi Kalbfleisch, Theodore Potnis, Chinmay S. Hartline, Kendall Keynton, Robert S. Gupta, Gautam RSC Adv Chemistry Room temperature biospecimen storage for prolonged periods is essential to eliminate energy consumption by ultra-low freezing or refrigeration-based storage techniques. State of the art practices that sufficiently minimize the direct or hidden costs associated with cold-chain logistics include ambient temperature storage of biospecimens (i.e., DNA, RNA, proteins, lipids) in the dry state. However, the biospecimens are still well-exposed to the stress associated with drying and reconstitution cycles, which augments the pre-analytical degradation of biospecimens prior to their downstream processing. An aqueous storage solution that can eliminate these stresses which are correlated to several cycles of drying/rehydration or freezing of biospecimens, is yet to be achieved by any current technology. In our study, we have addressed this room temperature biospecimen-protection challenge using aqueous capture and release gels for optimized storage (Bio-CaRGOS) of biospecimens. Herein, we have demonstrated a single-step ∼95% recovery of a metalloprotein hemoglobin at room temperature using a cost-effective standard microwave-based aqueous formulation of Bio-CaRGOS. Although hemoglobin samples are currently stored at sub-zero or under refrigeration (4 °C) conditions to avoid loss of integrity and an unpredictable diagnosis during their downstream assays, our results have displayed an unprecedented room temperature integrity preservation of hemoglobin. Bio-CaRGOS formulations efficiently preserve hemoglobin in its native state, with single-step protein recovery of ∼95% at ambient conditions (1 month) and ∼96% (7 months) under refrigeration conditions. In contrast, two-thirds of the control samples degrade under ambient (1 month) and refrigeration (7 months) settings. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2021-04-07 /pmc/articles/PMC8697545/ /pubmed/35423878 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra00987g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Boylan, Jack
Chauhan, Rajat
Koneru, Kavya
Bansal, Meenakshi
Kalbfleisch, Theodore
Potnis, Chinmay S.
Hartline, Kendall
Keynton, Robert S.
Gupta, Gautam
Bio-CaRGOS: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin
title Bio-CaRGOS: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin
title_full Bio-CaRGOS: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin
title_fullStr Bio-CaRGOS: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin
title_full_unstemmed Bio-CaRGOS: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin
title_short Bio-CaRGOS: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin
title_sort bio-cargos: capture and release gels for optimized storage of hemoglobin
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8697545/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35423878
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d1ra00987g
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