Electrochemical Enzyme Immunoassays on Microchip Platforms

Joseph Wang,* Alfredo Ibáñez, Madhu Prakash Chatrathi, and Alberto Escarpa
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, New Mexico State University, Las Cruces, New Mexico 88003
Anal. Chem., 2001, 73 (21), pp 5323–5327
DOI: 10.1021/ac010808h
Publication Date (Web): October 2, 2001
Copyright © 2001 American Chemical Society
*

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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