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Self-Assembled Au Nanoparticle Arrays for Precise Metabolic Assay of Cerebrospinal Fluid.

Yuning WangKun ZhangTongtong TianWeilong ShanLiang QiaoBao-Hong Liu
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2021)
Precise and rapid monitoring of metabolites in biofluids is a desirable but unmet goal for disease diagnosis and management. Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (MALDI-MS) exhibits advantages in metabolite analysis. However, the low accuracy in quantification of the technique limits its transformation to clinical usage. We report herein the use of Au nanoparticle arrays self-assembled at liquid-liquid interfaces for mass spectrometry (MS)-based quantitative biofluids metabolic profiling. The two-dimensional arrays feature uniformly and closely packed Au nanoparticles with 3 nm interparticle gaps. The experimental study and theoretical simulation show that the arrays exhibit high photothermal conversion and heat confinement effects, which enhance the laser desorption/ionization efficacy. With the nanoscale roughness, the AuNP arrays as laser desorption/ionization substrates can interrupt the coffee-ring effect during droplet evaporation. Therefore, high reproducibility (RSD <5%) is obtained, enabling accurate quantitative analysis of diverse metabolites from 1 μL of biofluids in seconds. By quantifying glucose in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), it allows us to identify patients with brain infection and rapidly evaluate the clinical therapy response. Consequently, the method shows potential in advanced metabolite analysis and biomedical diagnostics.
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