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Intradermal Glycine Detection with a Wearable Microneedle Biosensor: The First In Vivo Assay

[Image: see text] Glycine (GLY) is gaining importance in medical diagnoses due to its relationship with multiple physiological functions. Today, GLY is exclusively analyzed using instrumentation centralized in clinical labs, and a tangible point-of-care tool that gathers real-time data from the pati...

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Autores principales: Wang, Qianyu, Molinero-Fernandez, Agueda, Casanova, Ana, Titulaer, Joep, Campillo-Brocal, Jonatan C., Konradsson-Geuken, Åsa, Crespo, Gaston A., Cuartero, Maria
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2022
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9434558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35979995
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02317
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author Wang, Qianyu
Molinero-Fernandez, Agueda
Casanova, Ana
Titulaer, Joep
Campillo-Brocal, Jonatan C.
Konradsson-Geuken, Åsa
Crespo, Gaston A.
Cuartero, Maria
author_facet Wang, Qianyu
Molinero-Fernandez, Agueda
Casanova, Ana
Titulaer, Joep
Campillo-Brocal, Jonatan C.
Konradsson-Geuken, Åsa
Crespo, Gaston A.
Cuartero, Maria
author_sort Wang, Qianyu
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Glycine (GLY) is gaining importance in medical diagnoses due to its relationship with multiple physiological functions. Today, GLY is exclusively analyzed using instrumentation centralized in clinical labs, and a tangible point-of-care tool that gathers real-time data from the patient for effective and fast evaluations is lacking. Relevant clinical advances are expected as soon as the rapid provision of both punctual and continuous measurements is possible. In that context, this work presents a microneedle (MN)-based biosensor for intradermal GLY detection in interstitial fluid (ISF). The MN tip is externally tailored to detect GLY levels through the hydrogen peroxide formed in its reaction with a quinoprotein-based GLY oxidase enzyme. The analytical performance of the MN biosensor indicates a fast response time (<7 s); acceptable reversibility, reproducibility, and stability; as well as a wide linear range of response (25–600 μM) that covers the physiological levels of GLY in ISF. The MN biosensor conveniently exhibits high selectivity for GLY over other compounds commonly found in ISF, and the response is not influenced by temperature, pH, or skin insertions. Validated intradermal measurements of GLY were obtained at the in vitro (with pieces of rat skin), ex vivo (on-body tests of euthanized rats) and in vivo (on-body tests of anesthetized rats) levels, demonstrating its ability to produce accurate physiological data. The developed GLY MN biosensor is skin-wearable and provides reliable, real-time intradermal GLY measurements in ISF by means of a minimally invasive approach.
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spelling pubmed-94345582022-09-02 Intradermal Glycine Detection with a Wearable Microneedle Biosensor: The First In Vivo Assay Wang, Qianyu Molinero-Fernandez, Agueda Casanova, Ana Titulaer, Joep Campillo-Brocal, Jonatan C. Konradsson-Geuken, Åsa Crespo, Gaston A. Cuartero, Maria Anal Chem [Image: see text] Glycine (GLY) is gaining importance in medical diagnoses due to its relationship with multiple physiological functions. Today, GLY is exclusively analyzed using instrumentation centralized in clinical labs, and a tangible point-of-care tool that gathers real-time data from the patient for effective and fast evaluations is lacking. Relevant clinical advances are expected as soon as the rapid provision of both punctual and continuous measurements is possible. In that context, this work presents a microneedle (MN)-based biosensor for intradermal GLY detection in interstitial fluid (ISF). The MN tip is externally tailored to detect GLY levels through the hydrogen peroxide formed in its reaction with a quinoprotein-based GLY oxidase enzyme. The analytical performance of the MN biosensor indicates a fast response time (<7 s); acceptable reversibility, reproducibility, and stability; as well as a wide linear range of response (25–600 μM) that covers the physiological levels of GLY in ISF. The MN biosensor conveniently exhibits high selectivity for GLY over other compounds commonly found in ISF, and the response is not influenced by temperature, pH, or skin insertions. Validated intradermal measurements of GLY were obtained at the in vitro (with pieces of rat skin), ex vivo (on-body tests of euthanized rats) and in vivo (on-body tests of anesthetized rats) levels, demonstrating its ability to produce accurate physiological data. The developed GLY MN biosensor is skin-wearable and provides reliable, real-time intradermal GLY measurements in ISF by means of a minimally invasive approach. American Chemical Society 2022-08-18 2022-08-30 /pmc/articles/PMC9434558/ /pubmed/35979995 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02317 Text en © 2022 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Permits the broadest form of re-use including for commercial purposes, provided that author attribution and integrity are maintained (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Wang, Qianyu
Molinero-Fernandez, Agueda
Casanova, Ana
Titulaer, Joep
Campillo-Brocal, Jonatan C.
Konradsson-Geuken, Åsa
Crespo, Gaston A.
Cuartero, Maria
Intradermal Glycine Detection with a Wearable Microneedle Biosensor: The First In Vivo Assay
title Intradermal Glycine Detection with a Wearable Microneedle Biosensor: The First In Vivo Assay
title_full Intradermal Glycine Detection with a Wearable Microneedle Biosensor: The First In Vivo Assay
title_fullStr Intradermal Glycine Detection with a Wearable Microneedle Biosensor: The First In Vivo Assay
title_full_unstemmed Intradermal Glycine Detection with a Wearable Microneedle Biosensor: The First In Vivo Assay
title_short Intradermal Glycine Detection with a Wearable Microneedle Biosensor: The First In Vivo Assay
title_sort intradermal glycine detection with a wearable microneedle biosensor: the first in vivo assay
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9434558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35979995
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.2c02317
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