Article
Electrochemical Enzyme Immunoassays on Microchip Platforms
In papers with more than one author, the asterisk indicates the name of the author to whom inquiries about the paper should be addressed.
On leave from Departamento de Quimica Analitica, Universidad de Alcala, Alcala de Henares, Madrid, Spain.
Abstract
A microfluidic device for conducting electrochemical enzyme immunoassays is described. The new “lab-on-a-chip” protocol integrates precolumn reactions of alkaline phosphatase-labeled antibody (anti-mouse IgG) with the antigen (mouse IgG), followed by electrophoretic separation of the free antibody and antibody−antigen complex. The separation is followed by a postcolumn reaction of the enzyme tracer with the 4-aminophenyl phosphate substrate and a downstream amperometric detection of the liberated 4-aminophenol product. Factors influencing the reaction, separation, and detection processes were optimized, and the analytical performance was characterized. An applied field strength of 256 V/cm results in free antibody and antibody−antigen complex migration times of 125 and 340 s, respectively. A remarkably low detection limit of 2.5 × 10-16 g/mL (1.7 × 10-18 M) is obtained for the mouse IgG model analyte. Such combination of a complete integrated immunoassay, an attractive analytical performance, and the distinct miniaturization/portability advantages of electrochemical microsystems offers considerable promise for designing self-contained and disposable chips for decentralized clinical diagnostics or on-site environmental testing.
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History
- Published In Issue November 01, 2001
- Received for review July 18, 2001. Accepted August 22, 2001.
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