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Mie Scatter and Interfacial Tension Based Real-Time Quantification of Colloidal Emulsion Nucleic Acid Amplification.

Ariana M NicoliniTyler D TothSamuel Y KimM Alejandra MandelDavid W GalbraithJeong-Yeol Yoon
Published in: Advanced biosystems (2017)
This work demonstrates for the first time rapid, real-time Mie scatter sensing of colloidal emulsion nucleic acid amplification directly from emulsion droplets. Loop-mediated isothermal amplification is used in this study, and, to our knowledge, has not previously been used in a colloidal emulsion platform. Interfacial tension values (γ) associated with bulk protein adsorption and denaturation at the oil-water interface exhibit characteristic changes in the absence or presence of amplification. In the presence of target and amplicon, emulsions maintain a constant 300-400 nm diameter, whereas emulsions formed with no target control show a rapid decrease in droplet diameter to <100 nm over the first 20 min of incubation. This method is validated using whole bacteria (Staphylococcus aureus MSSA and Escherichia coli O157:H7) and whole virus (Potato virus Y and Zika virus) samples suspended in water, buffer, or serum-like matrices. Short-term formation of colloidal emulsion is quantified via 60° scatter monitoring, where the initial slope of scattering intensity is utilized to confirm target amplification in less than 5 min. The unique benefits of this method render it more cost-effective and field-deployable than existing methods, while being adaptable to a multitude of targets, sample matrices, and nucleic acid amplification tests.
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