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Archive for the ‘Electrophoresis’ Category

Poly(methyl methacrylate) microchip affinity capillary gel electrophoresis of aptamer-protein complexes for the analysis of thrombin in plasma

Posted by tanlab on October 22, 2008

ELECTROPHORESIS

Volume 29 Issue 16, Pages 3436 - 3445
Thrombin generation in blood serves as an important marker for various hemostasis-related diseases and conditions. Analytical techniques currently utilized for determining the thrombin potential of patients rely primarily on the enzymatic activity of thrombin. Microfluidic-based ACE using fluorescently labeled aptamers as affinity probes could provide a simple and efficient technique for the real-time analysis of thrombin levels in plasma. In this study, aptamers were used for the analysis of thrombin by affinity microchip CGE. The CGE used a poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) microfluidic device for the sorting of the affinity complexes with a linear polyacrylamide (LPA) serving as the sieving matrix. Due to the fact that the assay was run under nonequilibrium electrophoresis conditions, the presence of the sieving gel was found to stabilize the affinity complex, providing improved electrophoretic performance compared to free-solution electrophoresis. Two fluorescently labeled aptamer affinity probes, HD1 and HD22, which bind to exosites I and II, respectively, of thrombin were investigated. With an electric field strength of 300 V/cm, two well-resolved peaks corresponding to free aptamer and the thrombin-aptamer complex were obtained in less than 1 min of separation time with a run-to-run and chip-to-chip reproducibility (RSD) of migration times <10% using both aptamers. HD22 affinity assays of thrombin produced baseline-resolved peaks with favorable efficiency due to its higher binding affinity, whereas HD1 assays showed poorer resolution of the free aptamer and complex peaks. HD22 was used in determining the level of thrombin in human plasma. Assays were performed directly on plasma that was diluted to 10% v/v. Thrombin was successfully analyzed by microchip CGE at a concentration level of 543.5 nM for the human plasma sample.
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Development of aptamer-based affinity assays using temperature gradient focusing: Minimization of the limit of detection

Posted by tanlab on July 30, 2008

A method is described for an aptamer-based affinity assay using a combination of two nonconventional techniques, temperature gradient focusing (TGF) and field-amplified continuous sample injection TGF (FACSI-TGF), with fluorescence detection. Human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase (HIVRT) is used as the protein target for the assay. The TGF and FACSI-TGF assays are compared to similar results obtained with conventional CE. A range of starting aptamer concentrations are used to determine the optimal LOD for human immunodeficiency virus reverse transcriptase (HIVRT) using each approach. The results indicate that the LODs for HIVRT obtained with TGF and FACSI-TGF are comparable to or even lower than the LODs obtained with conventional CE in spite of the inferior detector used for the TGF and FACSI-TGF assays (arc lamp and low-cost CCD for TGF versus LIF with PMT for CE). It is hypothesized that this is due to the greater reproducibility of the TGF and FACSI-TGF techniques since they do not employ a defined sample injection. The lowest LOD achieved with the new aptamer assay approach is more than an order of magnitude lower than that reported for a similar CE-based aptamer assay for the same target.

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