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Tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone

Herein, this paper initially reports a new colorimetric Tyndall effect-inspired assay (TEA) for simple, low-cost, sensitive, specific, and point-of-care detection of creatinine (an important small biomolecule) by making use of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) as model colloidal nanoprobes for visual lig...

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Autores principales: Yuan, Kaijing, Sun, Yao, Liang, Fenchun, Pan, Fenglan, Hu, Miao, Hua, Fei, Yuan, Yali, Nie, Jinfang, Zhang, Yun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9382227/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36090387
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra03598g
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author Yuan, Kaijing
Sun, Yao
Liang, Fenchun
Pan, Fenglan
Hu, Miao
Hua, Fei
Yuan, Yali
Nie, Jinfang
Zhang, Yun
author_facet Yuan, Kaijing
Sun, Yao
Liang, Fenchun
Pan, Fenglan
Hu, Miao
Hua, Fei
Yuan, Yali
Nie, Jinfang
Zhang, Yun
author_sort Yuan, Kaijing
collection PubMed
description Herein, this paper initially reports a new colorimetric Tyndall effect-inspired assay (TEA) for simple, low-cost, sensitive, specific, and point-of-care detection of creatinine (an important small biomolecule) by making use of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) as model colloidal nanoprobes for visual light scattering signaling. The naked-eye TEA method adopts negatively-charged citrate-capped AgNPs (Cit-AgNPs) prepared by sodium citrate reduction. In the presence of alkaline conditions, the creatinine analyte can form carbanion/oxoanion amino tautomers which in turn crosslink with carboxylate groups on the Cit-AgNPs via a hydrogen bonding network to mediate the aggregation of such colloidal nanoprobes showing a significantly-enhanced TE signal that was created and quantified by a hand-held laser pointer pen and a smartphone, respectively. The results demonstrate that the resulting equipment-free method with the TE readout could enable the portable quantification of creatinine with a detection limit of ∼55 nM, which was ∼90–2334 times lower than that obtained from AgNP-based colorimetric approaches with the most common localized surface plasma resonance signaling. Moreover, it shows a larger analytical sensitivity up to ∼580.8227 signal per nM, offering ∼2.4–232-fold improvement in comparison with many of the recent instrumental creatinine nanosensors. The accuracy and practicality of the developed nanosensing system was additionally confirmed with satisfactory recovery results ranging from ca. 98.52 to 100.36% when analyzing a set of real complex human urine samples.
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spelling pubmed-93822272022-09-08 Tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone Yuan, Kaijing Sun, Yao Liang, Fenchun Pan, Fenglan Hu, Miao Hua, Fei Yuan, Yali Nie, Jinfang Zhang, Yun RSC Adv Chemistry Herein, this paper initially reports a new colorimetric Tyndall effect-inspired assay (TEA) for simple, low-cost, sensitive, specific, and point-of-care detection of creatinine (an important small biomolecule) by making use of silver nanoparticles (AgNPs) as model colloidal nanoprobes for visual light scattering signaling. The naked-eye TEA method adopts negatively-charged citrate-capped AgNPs (Cit-AgNPs) prepared by sodium citrate reduction. In the presence of alkaline conditions, the creatinine analyte can form carbanion/oxoanion amino tautomers which in turn crosslink with carboxylate groups on the Cit-AgNPs via a hydrogen bonding network to mediate the aggregation of such colloidal nanoprobes showing a significantly-enhanced TE signal that was created and quantified by a hand-held laser pointer pen and a smartphone, respectively. The results demonstrate that the resulting equipment-free method with the TE readout could enable the portable quantification of creatinine with a detection limit of ∼55 nM, which was ∼90–2334 times lower than that obtained from AgNP-based colorimetric approaches with the most common localized surface plasma resonance signaling. Moreover, it shows a larger analytical sensitivity up to ∼580.8227 signal per nM, offering ∼2.4–232-fold improvement in comparison with many of the recent instrumental creatinine nanosensors. The accuracy and practicality of the developed nanosensing system was additionally confirmed with satisfactory recovery results ranging from ca. 98.52 to 100.36% when analyzing a set of real complex human urine samples. The Royal Society of Chemistry 2022-08-17 /pmc/articles/PMC9382227/ /pubmed/36090387 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra03598g Text en This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/
spellingShingle Chemistry
Yuan, Kaijing
Sun, Yao
Liang, Fenchun
Pan, Fenglan
Hu, Miao
Hua, Fei
Yuan, Yali
Nie, Jinfang
Zhang, Yun
Tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone
title Tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone
title_full Tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone
title_fullStr Tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone
title_full_unstemmed Tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone
title_short Tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone
title_sort tyndall-effect-based colorimetric assay with colloidal silver nanoparticles for quantitative point-of-care detection of creatinine using a laser pointer pen and a smartphone
topic Chemistry
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9382227/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36090387
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d2ra03598g
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